2018 · hse health service executive iso international organisation for standardisation jbi joanna...
TRANSCRIPT
i
Documentation of nursing practice: A closer look at care plans
in semi-electronic and conventional paper based-records
during a time of change
Lorraine Lalor
A dissertation submitted to Trinity College Dublin in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the
degree of Master of Science in Health Informatics
2018
Declaration
ii
I declare that the work described in
this dissertation is, except where
otherwise stated, entirely my own
work, and has not been submitted
as an exercise for a degree at this or
any other university
Signed: _________________
Lorraine Lalor
16th July 2018
iii
Permission to lend and/or copy
I agree that the Trinity College
Library may lend or copy this
Dissertation upon request
Signed: _______________
Lorraine Lalor
16th July 2018
iv
Acknowledgements
I must begin with special thanks to Prof Lucy Hederman and Ms Gaye Stephens for their
support, motivation and immense knowledge.
I also wish to express my sincere thanks to my supervisor Mr Damon Berry, Dublin Institute of
Technology. Damon kept me on course, helped me explore ideas and teased out what I thought
I didn’t know or couldn’t do. The finished work is truly a collaboration of a wonderful leader
who nudged me in the right direction and didn’t allow me to falter but always there in the
background as a fantastic support.
I must also extend gratitude to my work colleagues for their support and advice while
conducting this piece of work. In particular, my Director of Nursing, Ms Geraldine Regan, her
support, encouragement and enthusiasm for nurse led research projects is inspiring. Dr Ian
Callinan in the audit department, Dr Alan Smith and all the staff in the Quality Department,
Thank you.
Thanks to Dr Colin Fitzpatrick and Dr Christopher Fitzpatrick for academic guidance and
support.
v
Table of Contents LIST OF TABLES .............................................................................................................................................. VII
LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................................................. VII
ABBREVIATIONS ............................................................................................................................................ VIII
GLOSSARY OF TERMS ....................................................................................................................................... IX
CHAPTER ONE [PREVIEW] ................................................................................................................... 1
BACKGROUND .................................................................................................................................................1
INTRODUCTION................................................................................................................................................2
1.1 THE PRINCIPALS OF GOOD NURSING RECORD MANAGEMENT .........................................................................3
1.2 KEY ASPECTS OF NURSING RECORDS ..........................................................................................................4
1.2.1 Professional Practice Models (PPM’s) .....................................................................................4
1.2.2 Nursing Process .......................................................................................................................6
1.2.3 Terminologies used in Nursing Records ...................................................................................7
1.3 MEASURING QUALITY OF CARE ......................................................................................................... 11
1.4 STUDY AIMS AND OBJECTIVES ........................................................................................................... 12
1.5 RESEARCH QUESTION ...................................................................................................................... 13
1.6 GUIDE TO LAYOUT OF REMAINING SECTIONS OF DISSERTATION .................................................................... 13
CHAPTER TWO [LITERATURE REVIEW] ............................................................................................... 15
2.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................. 15
2.1 SEARCH STRATEGY .......................................................................................................................... 16
2.2 THEMES IDENTIFIED: ....................................................................................................................... 17
2.2.1 Legal & Professional Responsibilities ................................................................................... 17
2.2.2 Measuring and Improving Quality by assessing Standards.................................................. 19
2.2.3 Importance of good and consequences of poor Documentation ......................................... 23
2.2.4 Standards for Nursing Records ............................................................................................. 26
2.2.5 Terminologies & Data Quality for Nursing Documentation ................................................. 27
2.2.6 Suggestions for Future study on topic of Nursing Documentation ...................................... 29
2.3 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER 2 ..................................................................................................................... 31
CHAPTER THREE [METHODS] ............................................................................................................ 32
3.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................. 32
3.1 RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODOLOGY ............................................................................................. 32
vi
3.1.1 Sample and sampling technique........................................................................................... 33
3.1.2 Audit Instrument ................................................................................................................... 33
3.2 RESEARCH QUESTION ........................................................................................................................... 35
3.4 ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS. ................................................................................................................... 36
3.4.1 Ethics Approval ..................................................................................................................... 36
3.5 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER THREE ......................................................................................................... 37
CHAPTER FOUR [RESULTS] ................................................................................................................ 37
4.1 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................................. 37
4.1.1 Characteristics format for paper and semi-electronic documentation used to collect data ..... 38
4.2 COMPARISON OF PAPER AND SEMI-ELECTRONIC NURSING RECORDS: NURSING CARE PLAN: PERSONAL ........... 40
4.3 COMPARISON OF PAPER AND SEMI-ELECTRONIC NURSING RECORDS: NURSING CARE PLAN NMBI GUIDANCE .. 42
4.4 COMPARISON OF PAPER AND SEMI-ELECTRONIC NURSING RECORDS: RISK ASSESSMENTS ............................. 44
4.4.1 Pressure Ulcer ....................................................................................................................... 44
4.4.2 Falls Risk ............................................................................................................................... 45
4.5 COMPARISON OF PAPER AND SEMI-ELECTRONIC NURSING RECORDS: DISCHARGE PLAN ..................................... 47
4.6 OVERALL RESULTS PAPER VERSUS SEMI-ELECTRONIC CARE PLAN.................................................................... 48
4.7 LIMITATIONS ................................................................................................................................. 50
4.8 DISCUSSION ....................................................................................................................................... 51
4.9 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER 4 ..................................................................................................................... 56
CHAPTER FIVE [SUGGESTIONS FOR FUTURE PRACTICE] ...................................................................... 56
5.1 EDUCATION ........................................................................................................................................ 57
5.2 CYCLICAL AUDIT .................................................................................................................................. 57
5.3 EHEALTH SOLUTIONS ........................................................................................................................... 57
5.3.1 Interactive Metrics Dashboard ............................................................................................. 57
5.3.2 Electronic Record and Clinical Decision Support system (CDSS) ........................................... 58
CHAPTER SIX [CONCLUSION] ............................................................................................................. 60
REFERENCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY ............................................................................................................ 61
APPENDICES: .................................................................................................................................... 71
APPENDIX 1: SEMI ELECTRONIC CARE-PLAN ....................................................................................................... 71
APPENDIX 1A: FREE TEXT PAPER RECORD CARE-PLAN ........................................................................................... 75
APPENDIX 2: ETHICS PROPOSAL & RESPONSES TO ETHICS COMMITTEE ................................................................... 76
vii
APPENDIX 3: ETHICS APPROVAL LETTERS ........................................................................................................... 88
APPENDIX 4: COPY OF FALLS RISK SCREENS AND PREVENTION CARE PLAN ................................................................. 95
APPENDIX 5: COPY OF PRESSURE ULCER/SKIN INTEGRITY ASSESSMENT ................................................................... 96
APPENDIX 6: COPY OF NURSING RECORD DISCHARGE PLAN ................................................................................... 96
List of Tables Table 1 Example of PPM's to support nursing practice ....................................................................... 5 Table 2 Purpose and rationale for clinical records ............................................................................ 18 Table 3 Benefits of quality care-metrics ........................................................................................... 22 Table 4 Audit tool instrument questions to assess quality of the nursing record .............................. 34 Table 5 Characteristics of charts chosen for audit ............................................................................ 39 Table 6 Guide to traffic light [RAG] tolerance ................................................................................... 40 Table 7 Compliance results for both forms of documentation .......................................................... 49 Table 8 Total individual results indicating RAG order of compliance ................................................. 49
List of figures Figure 1 Framework for the nursing process ...................................................................................... 6 Figure 2 Recognised Standard Nursing Terminologies ........................................................................ 8 Figure 3 Class diagram Nursing Language in practice ......................................................................... 9 Figure 4 UML concept map using NNN to capture nursing care of stroke patient ............................. 10 Figure 5 PICO -> Framing the research question............................................................................... 16 Figure 6 Nursing Care Plan: Personal Details ~ Paper Records .......................................................... 41 Figure 7 Nursing Care Plan: Personal Details ~ Semi-Electronic records ............................................ 41 Figure 8 Percentage Compliance of Nursing Care Plan: Personal details ~ both formats ................... 41 Figure 9 Paper Record NMBI guide Score ......................................................................................... 43 Figure 10 Semi electronic record NMBI Score .................................................................................. 43 Figure 11 Combined Records: percentage NMBI guidance score ...................................................... 43 Figure 12 NMBI guide entries in chronological order Figure 13 NMBI Guide entries dated & signed. 44 Figure 14 Pressure Ulcer assessment & care plan: Paper & Semi electronic records ......................... 45 Figure 15 Falls risk assessment compliance: Paper Records ............................................................. 46 Figure 16 Falls risk assessment compliance: Semi electronic records ............................................... 46 Figure 17 Discharge planning ........................................................................................................... 47 Figure 18 Documented evidence of discharge plan .......................................................................... 48 Figure 19 Sample charts for Interactive Metrics dashboard.............................................................. 58
viii
Abbreviations
ABA An Bord Altranais
ANA American Nurses Association
ADON Assistant Director of Nursing
Cat-ch-Ing Measurement instrument for nursing
documentation
CDSS Clinical Decision Support System
CNM Clinical Nurse Manager
DoH Department of Health
DoN Director of Nursing
EHR Electronic Health Record
HIQA Health Information and Quality Authority
HSE Health Service Executive
ISO International Organisation for Standardisation
JBI Joanna Briggs Institute
JCI Joint Commission International
KPI Key Performance Indicator
LAN Local Area Network
LOINC Logical Observation Identifiers Names and
Codes
MHC Mental Health Commission
NANDA-I Formerly known as North American Nursing
Diagnosis, 2018 referred to as NANDA-I
NCEC National Clinical Effectiveness Committee
NIC Nursing Interventions Classification
NMBI Nursing and Midwifery Bord of Ireland
NMCAT Nursing and Midwifery Content Audit Tool
NOC Nursing Outcomes Classification
NSAI National Standards Authority of Ireland
ix
ONMSD Office of the Nursing and Midwifery Services
Director
PPM Professional Practice Model (nursing)
PU Pressure Ulcer
QC-M Quality Care Metrics
SNL Standardised Nursing Language
SNOMED-CT Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine—
Clinical Terms
TYC Test Your Care website
UML Unified Modeling Language
WAN Wide Area Network
WHO World Health Organisation
Glossary of Terms
A
Acute Services: Secondary Health care where a patient receives active short term treatment for
an illness or injury, unscheduled or scheduled surgery.
x
Adverse event/outcome: An undesirable event experienced by a person while he/she are a
patient and receiving treatment, medication or an intervention.
Adverse Drug event: Avoidable negative outcome to a patient following administration of a
drug that leads to harm to a patient and could have been avoided.
Assessment Booklet: Section of the nursing record where a nurse records all necessary
admission details for a patient. One section will include personal details such as name, date of
birth, next of kin. Remaining sections will include past medical and surgical history, presenting
complaint, nursing risk assessments, nursing diagnoses. The nursing care plan is in a separate
booklet in semi-electronic records but in paper based records the nursing care plan is mainly in
the same booklet unless specific care pathways or care bundles are initiated which will be in
addition to free text nursing plan.
Assistant Director of Nursing (ADON): Senior Nurse Manager in charge of an area within a
health care facility who is also responsible for managing the complete extent of nursing staff.
C
Care Bundles: A collection of interventions that may be applied to manage a particular
condition.
Care Pathways: Also known as clinical pathways or integrated care pathways. Explained as a
strategic plan for the mutual decision making and organisation of care for a well-defined cohort
of patients for a specified period of time.
Care Plans: Provide direction for patient centred care.
Care Metrics: Process performance quality indicators framework for how nursing care can be
measured.
Careful Nursing Philosophy: Professional practice model. Adapted from the philosophy of
Aquinas, human beings are defined as persons.
I
International Classification for Nursing Practice (ICNP): A product of the International
Council of Nurses (ICN) and intended for use by nurses as a dictionary of term to describe and
document nursing practice.
N
xi
Nursing Process: Scientific practice application used by nurses to ensure the delivery of safe
care.
P
Primary Care Services: Refers to health care provided in the community.
Q
Quality-Care -Metrics: QC-M – Measures of the quality of nursing and midwifery clinical care
processes. They are aligned to evidence based standards and agreed through national
consensus.
R
Roper Logan Tierney Model of Nursing: Theory of nursing care based on the activities of daily
living. The model is currently being phased out and the one used for paper records in this study.
S
Secondary Care Services: Medical care provided by a specialist facility.
T
Tertiary Care Services: Health care from specialists in a large hospital after referral from primary
or secondary care teams.
1
Chapter One [Preview]
Background
The topic of nursing documentation is hugely popular within nursing circles and continues to
gain attention among the Health Informatics (HI) community as preparations for Electronic
Health Records (EHR) progress at a significant pace, albeit, not in line with our international
healthcare colleagues, but none the less plans are gaining a steady momentum. Changes in
nursing practice are evident, and necessary, in order to improve quality of care and to delineate
the presence of nursing practice in electronic records.
A large academic teaching hospital is currently implementing a new Professional Practice Model
(PPM) incorporating a Standardised Nursing Language (SNL), to some extent as preparation for
electronic records but also to improve standards of quality in documentation practices and
patient care. SNL is used in semi-electronic format where all care plans are electronically
stored. They are accessed for printing once appropriate nursing diagnoses are assumed.
Interventions are then pre-printed which only require a date and signature similar to electronic
records. Whereas paper based records, have some pre-printed booklets for sections of the care
plan. The theory behind SNL and the new PPM is not applied, therefore the assessment,
diagnoses and interventions are all free-text.
Any doubts held by health professionals about the importance of high quality documentation
around practice can be removed by an attendance at the coroners court. Observation of the
preparation beforehand where documentation was subjected to meticulous and methodical
scrutiny by Medical-Legal professionals, and questioning of a Staff Nurse (SN), Clinical Nurse
Manager (CNM) and Healthcare Assistant (HCA) on events that occurred years previously. It
heavily relies upon the quality of their documentation rather than memory to recall and
validate that quality care that has been delivered.
Seminal work on nursing documentation quite often focusses on paper based (Tange 1995) or
electronic format (Jones et al. 2010b; OʼBrien et al. 2015) and many compare the two,
(Tubaishat et al. 2015; Wang et al. 2011). However, few studies look at the transition from
2
paper to electronic form and the effect SNL use has on quality of documentation and practice or
possibly patient outcomes. One of the changes that has recently been made in the hospital that
is included in this study, is the adaptation of SNL into semi-electronic care plans. The motivation
behind this research therefore was twofold, one to address deficit around comparisons of two
styles of documentation and two, to explore the use of (SNL) which is used internationally in
EHR’s but was adapted within a semi-electronic format as preparation for electronic records.
See Appendix 1 for sample semi electronic care plan.
Introduction
Delivery of safe effective patient care relies considerably upon on access to accurate, timely
information, the value of which depends on the quality of data recorded and stored for retrieval
in patient records. For decades now eHealth Ireland has been working in the background to
produce a national Electronic Health Record (EHR) and in May 2016 a business case was
finalised and approved by the Health Service Executive (HSE), (HSE 2016). This programme
represents a significant transformation in the use of technology and data to support safe and
efficient care for future generations.
The use of Health Information Technology (HIT) provides solutions in addressing challenges for
health care (Burston, Chaboyer & Gillespie 2014; Kelley, Brandon & Docherty 2011a) (Shortliffe
& Cimino 2014) and with mixed results on fulfilment of this promise some studies believe HIT
improves patient outcomes by improving nursing documentation systems (Müller-Staub et al.
2007a), (O’Connor & Hardiker 2017). The Health Service Executive (HSE) service plan for 2018
(HSE 2018) acknowledges fiscal challenges in deploying HIT systems but recognises the
importance of developing information systems to facilitate communication, integrated and
continuation of care across primary and secondary level facilities.
Nowadays there is an emphasis on delivering gold standard patient care to all and as we
prepare for EHRs. This study will take a closer look at the progression the nursing profession has
taken in preparation for EHRs and to enhance care delivery. A documentation audit was
performed to examine new semi-electronic care plans using SNL and a new PPM versus paper
based traditional nursing records which are currently being phased out. Nursing care metrics
were chosen as the audit tool, the concept of which has been adapted from the business sector.
It is described as a set of calculated measurements demonstrating adherence to expected
professional standards. Metrics measure nursing care processes within nursing documentation;
this framework was chosen as it presents a framework to accurately reveal quality of
3
performance and adherence to documentation guidelines (Foulkes 2011). Quality Care Metrics
(QC-M) are considered a valid tool as it was developed in and currently used in the United
Kingdom (Sunderland 2009). Ireland (HIQA 2013; ONMSD 2013) endorse the use of metrics as a
measure towards to enhance safer care.
1.1 The Principals of good Nursing Record Management
Accountability is one of the compulsory foundations within professional nursing and midwifery
practice, (NMBI 2015) state the professional and legal responsibilities to be adhered to by
nurses and midwives on the standard of practice to which they provide. It also reminds
practitioners that accurate record keeping of care delivered is included in this obligation.
Practitioners are reminded that if something is not written down, it can be assumed that the
action did not happen, furthermore, this is the opinion taken in a court of law and at a fitness to
practice tribunal (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland 2014). In addition hospital policies,
national guidelines, (Data Protection Acts 1988 & 2003, GDPR 2018), and international Acts (EU
2016) also govern the recording of nursing/clinical practice.
Nurses and midwives are reminded that during the course of their work, documentation of
nursing specific decisions and rationale for decisions and actions must be obvious. (Thoroddsen
et al. 2013) describe the need for accurate, complete and reliable clinical information in relation
to patient care, also communication of care. It also reminds us that documentation of nursing
care acts as a reliable source to enable quality improvements, conduct research and support
quality improvement policies which will contribute to improved standards in care. In addition
(Prideaux 2011) describe documentation as an essential part of nursing practice having clinical
and legal consequences. Moreover, (Kelley, Brandon & Docherty 2011b) demonstrate a link
between good quality nursing records as a facilitator to improvement in patient care processes.
4
1.2 Key aspects of Nursing Records
1.2.1 Professional Practice Models (PPM’s)
Florence Nightingale, one of the most recognised names in the history of nursing, has certainly
laid the foundations for nursing practice, and provided a model, the tenets of which still exist
today, including documentation of nursing care, assessing nursing care standards and
introducing statistics to the profession with a view to evaluate and improve practice.
A (PPM) within nursing disciplines espouses the conceptual framework that contributes to
nursing care structures which guide safe, evidence based, patient centred care. Furthermore
PPM’s support the visualisation and communication of nursing practice (Slatyer et al. 2016).
(Stallings-Welden & Shirey 2015) acknowledge the challenge in the implementation of PPM and
report the advantages for both nurses and patient outcomes. An example of this is: nurse
interactions with colleagues, patients and relatives, decision making, autonomy, job satisfaction
and positive experiences for patients. Moreover they state that the lack of a verified PPM could
perhaps contribute to reduced standard in safety and quality of care.
In order to avoid ambiguity or confusion when referring to ‘models’ or ‘practice models’ it is
necessary to point out differences the term model may infer to nursing and computer science
experts. Unified Modeling Language (UML) differs to nursing models, in that PPM provides a
framework that guides nurses work in contrast to UML. It is a software tool commonly used by
software developers working on healthcare information systems (HIS) to augment visualisation,
specification of objects for healthcare workers who will be end users of the system (Aggarwal
2002). UML is, therefore an expressive writing language facilitating communication between
developers of elements within a HIS, presenting the objects in a specific format to support the
development of a complete HIS, (Choi, Jansen & Coenen 2015). The reference to PPM and
models throughout this dissertation refer to nursing practice models unless otherwise specified.
A UML concept map and scenario diagram are used later in this chapter to explain nursing
diagnoses and languages used to document all aspects of work carried out by nurses in their
duty of delivering care.
5
(Slatyer et al. 2016) clarifies that a PPM represents nursing values and outlines the structures
and processes that support nurses to practice in a professional, safe and effective manner. It
often includes a caring theory within the model (Meehan 2012). (Jacobs 2013) states that PPM’s
differ from a conceptual model of care highlighting the patient-nurse relationship in
combination with human values such as compassion, and professional relationship as delivering
planned evidence based practice, (Parkman & Loveridge 1994) however believe that PPM’s are
grounded in well-established nursing concepts incorporating organisational with nursing core
values. These are supported by hospital management to empower nurses as leaders in clinical
and managerial practice whereby accountability, partnership and leadership are embedded
concepts of the PPM supported by organisational governance (Kramer et al. 2009). An example
of nurse practice failures without a PPM in place, outlined in the Mid-Staffordshire Report
(Francis 2010), which recommended a review of nursing documentation, using it as a means to
measure standards and quality of care delivered thereby identifying opportunities to improve
standards. (Slatyer et al. 2016) agree describing how PPM’s improve nursing practice and
patient outcomes.
Some models may be more suitable for adaptation particular to local needs and preferences,
Table 1 is a sample of PPM’s used to support nursing practice and documentation.
TABLE 1 EXAMPLE OF PPM'S TO SUPPORT NURSING PRACTICE
PPM Focus
Roper Logan & Tierney (Roper, Logan & Tierney 2000) Model of care based on the
basic activities of daily living
Dorothea E Orem’s Self-care model (Orem 2003) Therapeutic self-care, what
patients or nurses need to
do to.
Sr Callista Roy’s Adaptation model (Phillips 2010) Changes required by people,
assisted by nurses in
response to environmental
stimuli
Betty Neuman’s Systems model
(Neuman & Fawcett 2011)
Environmental stressors on
patient’s wellness that
threaten stability
Imogen King’s conceptual System (Frey, Sieloff & Norris 2002) Ability of people to meet
basic needs (goal) to enable
social interaction.
6
Careful Nursing Philosophy (Meehan 2003) Developed independently
from hospital governances
and based on historical
research interpretations of
Irish nursing knowledge and
practice dating back to early
19th Century.
VIPS model (Darmer et al. 2006) (Florin et al. 2012)(Björvell, Wredling & Thorell-Ekstrand 2002a)
Acronym for the Swedish
model “well-being, Integrity,
Basic Values” all of which
underpin nursing care and
guide documentation in
paper or electronic forms.
1.2.2 Nursing Process
In 1987 the World Health Organization (WHO) embarked on a journey to progress the quality
nursing documentation across Europe (Björvell, Wredling & Thorell-Ekstrand 2002a). The
nursing process was defined as a systematic and scientifically logical method used by nurses to
support the planning and delivery of quality patient care. The process is a series of organised
steps designed as a guide not only to ensure optimum patient care, but every stage of the
nursing process from admission, to discharge must be recorded by nurses in the patient record
regardless of format. Figure 1: steps of the nursing process
FIGURE 1 FRAMEWORK FOR THE NURSING PROCESS
Patient
ASSESS
DIAGNOSE
PLANIMPLEMENT
EVALUATE
7
The nursing care plan is documentation of the ‘process’, and includes nurses planned actions to
address an identified nursing diagnoses and/or collaborative problems. It also includes the
record of all actions or interventions, the PPM is the framework to guide patient centred care.
Nursing departments within health care agencies decide upon which professional practice
model to use for documentation. (Donabedian 1997) indicates that an accurate complete and
process orientated record is central to quality care. A PPM provides the framework to assist
nurses plan their nursing process which are essential steps taken to formulate a care plan.
1.2.3 Terminologies used in Nursing Records
Decades of international research has resulted in several nursing languages for documentation
of nursing practice. The use of a Standardised Nursing Language (SNL) is described as a means
of increasing descriptors of nursing practice, supporting daily care and improving patient safety
(Saranto et al. 2014). The interface terminologies used in semi-electronic care plans chosen for
audit for this dissertation is NANDA I, (NIC) (Bulechek et al, 2013) and (NOC) (Moorhead et al
2013), collectively known as NNN, the PPM is Careful Nursing . The PPM applied in the paper
format is Roper Logan Tierney “activities of daily living” and the documentation format is
framed within that model. This is due to professional and legal responsibilities for nurses with
regard to documentation, and the outcome goals for each patient. The same audit tool was
used to assess both forms and data quality criteria applied equally for each chart regardless of
format.
Figure 2 presents standardised nursing terminologies currently recognised by the American
Nurses Association (ANA) recognises eight interface terminologies, two minimum data sets and
two reference terminologies: Fig 2
8
FIGURE 2 RECOGNISED STANDARD NURSING TERMINOLOGIES
Minimum data sets are a minimum; “essential set of data elements with standardized
definitions and codes collected for a specific purpose, such as describing clinical nursing
practice or nursing management contextual data that influence care” (Westra et al. 2008)
“Interface terminologies (point-of-care) include the actual terms/concepts used by nurses for
describing and documenting the care of patients” explained by (Westra et al. 2008),(Herdman
& Kamitsuru 2014b), (Bulecheck et al. 2013) and (Moorhead et al. 2013).
Internationally recognised reference terminologies, such as, SNOMED-CT and LOINC contain
recognised codes for all aspects of health care delivered and corresponding codes for billing
purposes. Reference terminologies support common semantics and enable all health care users
to choose appropriate terms within their discipline but also allows the terms to be mapped in
order that the data’s true meaning can be shared across other disciplines. Several authors
present opinions and justification for particular SNL (Cynthia Lundberg et al. 2008; Hardiker,
Hoy & Casey 2000; Kim, Coenen & Hardiker 2012a) but all agree that a standardised
terminology is essential to ensure validation and visibility of nursing practice.
SNL defines nursing practice and delineates nursing diagnoses and nursing care separate to
medical diagnoses (Jones et al. 2010a; Rabelo-Silva et al. 2017), similarly (Clarke & Lang, 1992)
focussed on actual nursing diagnoses rather than medical diagnoses and the recognition of a
clear language to better establish nursing criteria and ensure patient safety. Figure 3 represents
this in a class diagram.
REFERENCE TERMINOLOGIESSNOMED CT LOGICAL OBSERVATION IDENTIFIERS AND CODES (LOINC)
MINIMUM DATASETSNursing Minimum Data Set (NMDS)
Nursing Management Minimum Data Set (NMMDS)
INTERFACE TERMINOLOGIESNANDA-I NOC NIC ICNP
CLINICAL CARE CLASSIFICATION
(CCC)
OMAHAPERIOPERATIVE
(PNDS)
9
Problem
Patient Collaborative Problems
Diagnosis
Outcome
Intervention
Symptom
Medical Diagnosis Nursing Diagnosis
Lea
ds
to
10001000
* is achieved by
Leads to
*
1.*1..*
FIGURE 3 CLASS DIAGRAM NURSING LANGUAGE IN PRACTICE
Medical diagnosis refers to a condition or state whereas nursing diagnosis is the management
of a response to the condition, for example:
Medical Diagnosis => “Right sided Stroke” “Hypertension” “Atrial Fibrillation”
Nursing Diagnoses => “Impaired verbal communication” “Impaired physical mobility”
“Ineffective coping” “Self-care deficits” “Urinary incontinence
functional”.
Figure 4 illustrates this in a concept map as an instantiation of the class diagram [Figure 3]
showing links to NANDA I codes and demonstrates a sample copy of SNL terminology system
10
that is used in this work. The diagram illustrates how the general concepts from NANDA I may
be utilised for a specific clinical scenario, in this case the nursing management of a stroke.
Stroke: Medical Diagnosis
163.9
Leg/Arm weakness: Symptom
Impaired verbal communication:
Nursing diagnosis
Nanda Diagnostic code: 00051
Domain:5
Class:5
Communication/
Expressive:Outcome
Nanda (NOC) Code: 0903
Communication
Enhancement_Speech deficit:
Intervention
Nanda I (NIC) code 4976
Proved alternate method of
communication: Intervention
Nanda I (NIC)
Facial Droop: Symptom Unable to speak: Symptom
FIGURE 4 UML CONCEPT MAP USING NNN TO CAPTURE NURSING CARE OF STROKE PATIENT
QC-M are used to measure adherence to the nursing process. For the purpose of this
dissertation elements of QC-M was applied in the documentation audit. NANDA I, NIC and NOC
(NNN) is the chosen SNL in semi-electronic records. Reference terminology was not applicable
because although NNN has been mapped internationally to Systemized Nomenclature of
Medical Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) it has not recently been updated. Care-plans are not yet
fully electronic and as Ireland has recently purchased the (SNOMED-CT) licence it is anticipated
to have NNN mapped in the near future and embedded onto a “standards based master data
dictionary”. This will ensure common semantics and interoperability of all medical clinical terms
(Department of Health 2013 pg 34 section 7.1). NMDS provide elements to format the frame for
SNL. Paper based records use PPM to formulate care plan. Admission details are captured on an
11
assessment booklet similar to the semi-electronic care plans. The plan of care is written free-
text within the nursing booklet and not a separate identified care plan per se.
Standards, terminologies and data quality for nursing records are further discussed in Chapter 2
sections 2.2.4 and 2.2.5.
The audit process used for this dissertation is explained in Chapter 3 [Methods] & Chapter 4
[Results]. Appendix 2 (Appendix of research Proposal).
1.3 Measuring Quality of Care
Improving quality and demonstrating effectiveness throughout all domains of healthcare are
central to the delivery of safe care. In addition changes in practice are necessary in order to
improve standards. This involves assessing adherence to system and process performance
resulting in improved professional development, (Batalden & Davidoff 2007). (Foulkes 2011;
Sunderland 2009) agree and present the benefits, concepts and future plans for the role Quality
Care Metrics (QC-M) plays in collecting, analysing and evaluating standards of practice through
nursing documentation.
A solution for this problem was developed in the United Kingdom (UK) to monitor patient safety
in a response to an increase in avoidable patient adverse events such as falls, pressure ulcers
and medication incidents. It is a user friendly and transparent web based tool called “Test Your
Care” (TYC). In 2012 the Nursing and Midwifery Practice Development Units (NMPDU) which
are under the governance of Health Services Executive (HSE) Office of Nursing and Midwifery
Serviced Director (ONMSD) supported the implementation of TYC and a group of nursing
specific metrics authorised from the Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, the national
project is called Nursing and Midwifery Quality Care-Metrics (QC-M). The specific metrics were
developed and established based on standards from the Nursing and Midwifery Board of
Ireland (NMBI), Health Information Quality Authority (HIQA) and Mental Health
Commission(MHC), (Health Service Executive 2018).
Application of the QCM process, the “TYC” website and data quality dimensions (Scannapieco,
Missier & Batini 2005) were applied for the purpose of auditing nursing records. These are
discussed further in chapter 2, section 2.3.2 and results section.
12
The intention is that QC-M is available in ‘real-time’ so ward clinical nurse managers (CNM) and
senior nurse managers can review progress, however, some hospitals collect data on paper
which is entered on to the TYC website by auditors later.
Chapter five presents suggestions for changes our hospital could easily implement in order to
gain maximum benefits of using QC-M as a means to measure quality of patient care and an
intention to maintain or improve standards practice and documentation.
1.4 Study Aims and Objectives
In an era of preparation towards Electronic Health Records (EHR), the aim of this study is to
measure the quality, accuracy and timeliness of two nursing documentation styles, subjected to
the same audit process.
A) semi-electronic format, using NANDA I, Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) and
Nursing Outcomes Classifications (NOC) collectively referred to as (NNN),
incorporating the Careful Nursing Professional Practice model
AND
B) traditional paper based nursing care plans using traditional Roper Logan Tierney nursing
process,(Roper, Logan & Tierney 2000).
Data was audited based on the national architecture audit tool (HSE QC-M) used to measure quality.
The content of documentation was also appraised for accuracy, completeness, timeliness and
validity, as per data quality guidelines described by (Scannapieco, Missier & Batini 2005), and
(Pipino, Lee & Wang 2002). Following statistical analysis of both methods, comparisons or
similarities will be examined and suggestions for change in practice presented.
The objective is to ascertain if the application of SNL in semi-electronic care plans reflects negatively
on the quality of nursing assessment documentation and subsequent plan of care and/or patient
outcomes.
13
1.5 Research Question
A closer look will be taken at two different styles of nursing documentation, paper based and
semi-electronic. As a new PPM is introduced incorporating SNL, simultaneously a
documentation audit was carried out on the newly implemented and outgoing nursing records.
A number of questions have arisen from this exercise.
Firstly: Documentation of the nursing assessment and care plan: Are there differences in
compliance in the recording of nursing care in semi-electronic and paper based systems?
Secondly: Do paper records fulfil the professional and legal criteria necessary for 21st century
nurses?
Thirdly: Can the application of SNL in nursing care-plans improve compliance of nurses legal and
professional responsibilities towards documentation practice?
Finally, having examined the first three questions the overarching question is:
“In assessing the quality care process within nursing documentation, are there differences between
paper and semi electronic records?”
1.6 Guide to layout of remaining sections of dissertation
During the course of the literature review, which took place prior to conducting the
documentation audit, a wide range of themes emerged from papers written by nursing and HI
scholars. Combining ideations from both sectors provided an insightful and slightly different
focus to apply to the data that was to be collected. This slight change of course applied
stringent data quality assessment criteria in addition to the national tool that is QC-M and
measures nursing and midwifery care processes and patient experiences. The literature from
both disciplines revealed varied opinions on many areas and these were articulated into themes
to be addressed throughout the dissertation.
14
The remainder to the dissertation is laid out as follows;
Chapter two will present the literature review and themes deduced therein. The use of metrics
to assess standards and quality in nursing documentation identifying areas that do not comply
and may need quality improvement plans applied is presented.
There are very few papers on the topic of preparation for EHR where semi-electronic system is
used – the idea behind semi-electronic is that nurses use a PPM and SNL that is used in EHR’s.
The use of SNL is a preparation towards adaptation of electronic documentation and involved
formulating a specific nursing care plan, devised by the nurse applying nurse specific diagnosis
using critical thinking skills to a patient centred approach. The SNL used is NANDA I but other
forms of SNL are mentioned where systematic reviews addressed the topic. Various studies will
be presented that support or disagree with my research questions.
Chapter three presents the design and methodology. Analysis, collection and storage of raw
data is explained. Also presented is the standards to which the practice that practice is measured
against, the audit tool used to collect data and a background of the conditions where the audits
took place.
Chapter four reveals and interpret the results and a complete analysis of data in relation to the
themes discussed in chapter 2 will be presented and compared not only against each other but
also in relation to seminal works on the topic.
Chapter five is a general discussion on the principal findings in an attempt to answer my
research questions and contains suggestions of changes that could be made to ensure data
collected for clinical audit is available real-time for ward managers to enable time to improve
compliance in nursing documentation and in turn ensure safer care.
Chapter six concludes the dissertation
15
Chapter Two [Literature Review]
2.0 Introduction
Literature on the topic SNL in nursing documentation refer to its value in relation to improving
safety, supporting daily care, evidence of practice, professional responsibilities and facilitating
communication between primary and secondary care service, (Saranto et al. 2014), (Matney et al.
2012), (Jefferies, Johnson & Griffiths 2010), (Rutherford 2008). In addition nursing notes act as a
repository to enable continuous assessments of care delivered and outcomes of care with the
intention of improving quality of care, (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) 2015),
(Mykkänen, Saranto & Miettinen 2012). Chapter two elucidates the findings and themes assumed
following a narrative review; some elements of the meta-analysis were adapted to assist with
inclusion criteria affording deeper analysis from planning to synthesis of suitable articles,
(Greenhalgh et al. 2005). The search included literature on nursing documentation in paper
based and electronic formats. Nursing documentation in EHR’s use SNL to record nursing care
as opposed to freehand text written into paper records. The semi-electronic format addressed
throughout this dissertation uses the SNL Nanda I Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) &
Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC) collectively known as NNN.
Research of literature on the topic was conducted to discover a non-biased view on different
aspects of nursing documentation including:
o Practice models and theories applied to both paper and electronic health records;
o Application of Standardised nursing languages and their effect on documentation,
practice and outcomes of care. In addition, methods deployed to measure quality of
documentation and quality of care were explored, namely clinical audit;
o Assessment of documentation to measure adherence to frameworks that define practice
standards of practice and consequent quality of care, e.g. quality care metrics, Key
Performance Indicators (KPI’s);
Literature review was conducted during a change in practice for nursing in preparation towards
Electronic Health Records (EHR). The aim was to gain a broad view of influential work on the
topic around nursing documentation in both paper based and electronic patient records but the
main focus is on electronic or semi-electronic record keeping. This is the plan for the future of
documentation, either a national EHR or organisational electronic personal records (EPR).
16
The hospital where the audit took place is implementing semi-electronic nursing care plans
which uses a standardised nursing language (SNL) to record nursing practice, the same used in
EHR documentation. The underlying purpose was to integrate findings and collate major
themes from studies of paper based documentation using traditional styles of documentation
and electronic nursing documentation using SNL’s.
2.1 Search Strategy
The Problem/Problem, Intervention, Comparators, Outcomes (PICO) framework was applied to
formulate my research questions. PICO affords a well-defined search strategy for literature
searches in order that I retrieve and collate published work from authors citing a broad
spectrum of both positive and negative appraisal of the material for this topic. (Figure 4).
P Problem/Population →Format used for nursing documentation of nursing care in paper and electronic health records,
I Intervention → Implementation of a new professional practice model incorporating a Standardised Nursing Language as is used in Electronic Health Records
C Comparison → Paper based records using traditional practice model and handwritten devised care plans with semi-electronic care plans devised using Standardised Nursing Language NANDA I NIC & NOC (NNN). Evaluating quality of documentation and evidence of care -> clinical audit
O Outcome → Are there differences between both styles of documentation in terms of quality?
FIGURE 5 PICO -> FRAMING THE RESEARCH QUESTION
The following key words and synonyms were identified using the PICO framework:
“nursing”; “documentation”; “professional practice models”; “nursing processes”; “electronic
health records”; “paper based records”; “standardised nursing language”; “clinical audit”
“documentation audit”. Later “standardized nursing language” was added because alternative
spelling using ‘Z’ instead of ‘S’ and “nurs*” “audit*” and/or “documentation” and/or
“measuring quality” and/or “clinical audit” which widened the results parameters and revealed
appropriate literature to ensure a wide spectrum of international opinions. Initially only
17
contemporary literature was retrieved. However after reading some of these articles it was
noted that influential work dating back decades was frequently quoted in current literature so
some of this was deemed valid for inclusion.
The following databases were used for the search: PubMed, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Science
Direct, ProQuest, Web of Science, Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI), Google Scholar, OVID and
Scopus and included original articles, systematic and narrative reviews, government
publications and health authority documents from Ireland, the UK, Scandinavia and Australia.
2.2 Themes Identified:
Themes that were identified throughout the literature review were sometimes the subject
within the main body of papers, some were declared as significant issues deserving further
research. All included the topic of nursing documentation both in paper and electronic format
adapting the SNL that is used in the semi-electronic version of records audited. The themes are
as follows:
❖ Legal & Professional responsibilities of nurses
❖ Measuring Documentation to enhance Quality of care
❖ Importance of good and consequences of poor Documentation
❖ Standardised Terminologies & Quality of data for nursing records
❖ Suggestions for future study
Sections of the QC-M tool emulate identified themes which presents an effective approach for
examining both styles of documentation.
2.2.1 Legal & Professional Responsibilities
Nursing bodies, national laws and organisational policies govern the requirements of each
nurse in relation to their obligation for completing patient records, namely the code of
professional conduct (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) 2015) and guidelines for
completing clinical/nursing records (NMBI 2015) and (Health Services Executive 2011).
The (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) 2015), affirm legal and professional
conditions regarding the management and collation of nursing documentation: The Board
believe that the quality of records maintained is a direct reflection of the quality of care
18
delivered to patients. All nursing documentation, paper based and electronic, regardless of
setting, should adhere to the guidelines of their respective nursing body. They should conform
to standards as set out by national and local policies and serve as an essential factor of nursing
practice. An inaccurate rationale behind the development of a care plan and evidence of the
actual care delivered due to poor documentation can lead to adverse events for patients.
The Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) is a self-regulating body with legal powers
and responsibility for monitoring, improving and setting standards for patient safety in Ireland
and the Health Act 2007 affords HIQA the powers to do so. An inspection by HIQA uses
documentation to gather evidence of care delivered and will ascertain facts written in the
nursing record, interviews with staff members and events observed during a visit to formulate a
report measuring care delivered against an expected national standard.
Table 1 outlines the minimum essentials of good clinical record keeping as detailed in (NMBI
2015) “Recording Clinical Practice” as required (Health Services Executive 2011).
TABLE 2 PURPOSE AND RATIONALE FOR CLINICAL RECORDS
Purpose Rationale
Documented evidence of nursing & midwifery
care planned and delivered
Documentation should include:
An accurate assessment of the person’s physical,
emotional and social well-being and should
include opinions of significant others, namely
family or next of kin (NOK).
Evidence of Planned and delivered care including
a rationale/reason if care was not given, should
reflect nurses clinical reasoning.
Patients response to treatment.
Education given to patient and family.
An evaluation of the positive and/or negative
consequences of care provided.
Entered in chronological order.
Written as events occur.
Any change in status should be recorded
19
Must contain actual work of nurses and
discussions with patients in a non-biased
manner.
Facilitate communication Details of care given should be shared between
all members of the multi-disciplinary health care
team.
Record should be legible and only include
approved abbreviations.
Documentary evidence of delivery and quality
of care.
Evidence of Nursing & Midwifery rationale and
decision making.
Continuity of care between health care
professionals and facilities with details of future
plan of care.
Data available for clinical audit & to evaluate
practice.
Data available for dealing with complaints
Data available for teaching students.
Data available for legal enquiries.
Should be patient centred The patient should be referred to by name.
2.2.2 Measuring and Improving Quality by assessing Standards
Clinical care delivered by nurses is based on a logical model with scientific fundamentals, which
in turn forms the basis of a ‘care-plan’. The measurement of the extent to which nurses and
midwives follow the process contributes greatly in maintaining high standards of evidence
based safe quality care.
Quality improvement supports positive changes and measurement of nursing care
documentation is pivotal in identifying areas that require improvement (The Mid Staffordshire
Foundation Trust 2013). Similarly (Griffith et al. 2008; Maben & Griffiths 2012) identify the
universal practice of measuring efficiency and quality via performance management. One such
20
method is “Nursing and Midwifery metrics” whereby quality indicators provide a framework to
measure standards of nursing care within nursing records, (Foulkes 2011), by informing efficient
and inefficient practices. (Giltenane, Frazer & Sheridan 2016; ONMSD 2013) agree and present
Quality Care Metrics (QC-M) as an effective means to measuring standards of care in order to
improve or validate nursing practice.
Evidence from research demonstrates that adverse events causing harm to patients are as a
result of process and system failures (Institute of Medicine 2010) and organisational structures
(Björvel, Wredling & Thorell-Ekstrand 2003a). (Linnen 2016) points to the large volume of data
generated by nurses each day in recording practice of planned and delivered care and the
subsequent slow turnaround of analysed data which leads to a delay in producing quality
improvements. However, (HIQA 2013) recognises the importance of measuring quality of care
through (QC-M) which is a necessary mechanism to determine areas that require improvement
and (Foulkes 2011) explains how QC-M provide the necessary framework that should be
applied. QC-M can reveal evidence of good safe nursing care which improves a patients’
experience and can highlight areas of the documentation process that need improvement
which in turn can avoid unsafe sub-standard care. (Redman 1998) suggests the notion that
generating alertness to a problem or potential problem is an important step towards creating a
solution. This is the essence of clinical audit, namely identifying areas of underperformance
with an action plan or creating a set of Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) as the solution,
although (Linnen 2016) argues that retrospective review of charts presents a static view of past
events and that data extracted manually is not analysed in a timely manner by quality departments.
This may cause a delay from the time data is interpreted into valuable information that will support
changes in practice resulting in improved outcomes for patients. Furthermore, (Bowie, Bradley &
Rushmer 2012) examine the validity and contribution of clinical audit following a qualitative study
involving key stakeholders responses and question why clinical audit continues to be used as a
quality improvement tool. They believe that evidence of the benefits of clinical audit and
subsequent quality improvement initiatives in an attempt to improvement patient care are
inadequate. This study expressed the viewpoint by clinicians who demonstrated difficulty in
conducting clinical audit in addition to their usual workload. However clinical audit is more effective
when considerations are given to staff by management if the outcome is to be of true value in
offering solutions to problems (Callanan 2012; Excutive 2015; National Clinical Effectivemess
Committee 2015).
Evaluation of documentation of care delivered contributes to identifying areas of care that may
require improvement. It also demonstrates areas of good quality care. Furthermore, evaluation on
the content of documentation measures to see if nurses are practising in accordance with approved
or recommended processes. In turn, this ensures evidence based and safe care is delivered. It is also
a requirement by the Health Information and Quality Authority who specified:
21
“Unless we actually measure the quality and safety of care, we cannot determine if improvements
are being made” (HIQA 2013, pg 2)
The proposal ‘Patient Safety First’ was introduced in 2010 as suggested in the Report of the
Commission on Patient Safety and Quality and Assurance – Building a Culture of Patient Safety
(DoH 2008) to voice service user opinion of care received. The proposal suggested a National
Framework for Clinical Effectiveness with the intention of offering structure and processes in
the form of clinical guidelines. The use of clinical audit to ensure optimum patient care and
outcomes were achieved by identifying areas that require improvement but also identify areas
of good practice regarding the delivery of safe quality evidence based care. This information is
captured directly from the patient records but in addition from the ‘patient experience survey’
(DoH 2018).
The National Service Plan (HSE 2018) outlines the importance of quality and patient safety in
maintaining standards of care and minimising risk to patients. The Quality Assurance
Framework incorporating clinical audit is a means suggested to support improving quality and
safety by identifying areas that require improvement and areas demonstrating good quality
practice. Areas that need improvement in order to achieve national standards are addressed by
initiating ‘action plans’, regular measurement to ensure standards are maintained via KPI’s, or
supplemental staff training. Standards of care is what a person should expect should they
require health care services. Furthermore, (Richter & Muhlestein 2017) report that a positive
patient experience reflects positive financial outcomes for healthcare organisations. Moreover,
(Tsai et al. 2015) demonstrated that effective use of quality metrics to monitor performance
resulted in higher performance and provided targets which contribute to increased quality of
care.
The National Clinical Effectiveness Committee (NCEC) and Health Information and Quality
Authority (HIQA) carry out inspection audits in order to monitor services against measured
national standards. NCEC provides the framework for developing clinical audits and guidelines.
HIQA is an independent body funded by the HSE to monitor services nationally. Local clinical
audits help to prepare organisations to meet national and indeed international standards such
as required by the Joint Commission International (JCI). However, more importantly audits
identify areas of good and bad practice guaranteeing the delivery of safe evidence based quality
care.
22
Alternative Audit Tools in use for measuring quality in documentation
QC-M is designed for real time data collection to allow up to date review of compliance and prompt
response if required (Royal College of Nursing 2011). It is the audit tool of choice because it is a
nationally accepted and validated audit instrument with care processes and associated metrics that
are relevant and fit in well with themes deduced following the literature review.
(Bjorvell, Thorell-Ekstrand & Wredling 2000) also trust documentation audit to measure nurse’s
clinical judgements by developing and validating the Cat-ch-Ing instrument which was used by
(Darmer et al. 2006). They used the same tool to demonstrate improvement in nursing
documentation following the introduction and application of the VIPS nursing model (The VIPS
model is a Swedish acronym for Well-being, Integrity, Prevention and Safety, reflecting basic values
in nursing care). An alternative but equally productive audit tool is the Nursing and Midwifery
Content Audit Tool (NMCAT) presented by (JOHNSON, JEFFERIES & LANGDON 2010) as an effective
means to measure the quality of content within nursing records.
(Donabedian 1988) maintains that quality of care can be divided into three classifications as
Firstly) structure, Secondly) process and Thirdly) outcome and insists that it cannot be measured
without being aware of the relationships between the three classifications, which means that
social and physical factors can influence patients eventual outcome. Thus making it somewhat
difficult to ascertain if the extent of an actual outcome is entirely due to care delivered. In
addition, stating that is it is important to evaluate the process of care and recommends that
measurement of quality should include the structure, process and outcome taxonomies, the QC-
M, NMCAT and Cat-ch-Ing tools offer exactly this.
Table 2 outlines benefits of Quality Care-Metrics:
TABLE 3 BENEFITS OF QUALITY CARE-METRICS
BENEFITS OF QUALITY CARE-METRICS
M Measurement of Standard
E Engagement of Staff
T Timely Information
R Results-open & Transparent
I Improvement for Patients
C Culture Change
S Shared Learning
23
2.2.3 Importance of good and consequences of poor Documentation
Patient Safety and Quality of Care
Patient safety remains one of the most fundamental issues facing health care today. The
delivery of safe, effective care places the patient and family at the core. It is the responsibility of
all health care employees. Nurses provide care to patients every hour of every day and their
contribution to influence patient outcomes are immense. This is, however, only if the care-plan,
interventions and actions have been documented, (NMBI 2015). (Kim, Coenen & Hardiker
2012b) acknowledge nurses as the largest group of health care providers and therefore the
nurses work is central to the delivery of effective care.
Nurses who are appropriately educated in the principals documentation and follow their
organisations guidelines are shown to produce an accurate record of nursing practice. They
consequently deliver safer patient care, (Frank-Stromborg, Christensen & Elmhurst-Do 2001).
(D’Amour et al. 2014) reported 76.8% or one patient out of every seven hospitalised on a
medical unit experiences at least one adverse event, which has negative impacts on lifestyle
and imposes fiscal consequences on healthcare facilities. The literature accepts certain adverse
events as being attributable to nursing care, including: Pressure sores; Falls; Medication
Administration errors; Inappropriate use of restraints; Pneumonia; Urinary infections. These are
regarded as nursing sensitive outcomes (Brown et al. 2010), or widely accepted as the nurses
responsibility (Savitz, Jones & Bernard 2005). It reflects on how nursing practice relates directly
to patient safety and (Okaisu et al. 2014) convey that poor standards of documentation are
associated with a reduced standard, regardless of format in quality of care.
(Jefferies, Johnson & Nicholls 2011) contend that if readers cannot understand nursing
documentation of planned, or delivered care, there is a risk that misinterpretations could lead
to nurse related, avoidable, adverse events. (D’Amour et al. 2014) suggests a better
understanding of the nurse’s contribution in the problem of patients who suffer an adverse
event will help to identify contributing factors and thereby identify necessary action. (Müller-
Staub et al. 2007a) demonstrate how nursing processes support nursing documentation and in
turn contribute to improved patient outcomes, similarly (Kent & Morrow 2014) report on
24
several initiatives undertaken in the United Kingdom demonstrating improvement in
documentation of nursing and midwifery practice led to improve documentation of nursing
practice. This in turn, not only demonstrated improved care but led to the process of improving
documentation which has supported a national policy on implementing a better, safer, care
strategy. In addition, (Institute of Medicine 2011) recognise the essential role nurses’ contribute
to quality and safety in patient care.
Some of the benefits for EHR implementation for patients include better quality care and
improved safety, advanced methods of communication between interdisciplinary teams, (HSE
2016), (Middleton et al. 2013; Saranto et al. 2014). However (Kelley, Brandon & Docherty
2011b) doubt the contribution electronic documentation makes towards improvement in the
quality of care patients receive during admission because of the lack in the use of comparison
between paper based and electronic documentation. However, (Kim, Patricia C. Dykes, et al.
2011a) highlighted problems within the paper based health care records that require
redefinition for an electronic system in order to fully support a complete and accurate
documented account of nursing care. In addition (Lee 2015) hypothesises patient safety,
reliability of care, efficiency and the patient experience as key indicators of performance from
an organisational perspective define the status of the health care facility. (Lee 2015) presents
the notion of measuring patient experiences and their own opinion of their outcome, in order
to improve standards. “Patient Experience Survey” commenced in 2017 and repeated 2018
(DoH 2018) is an example of measuring from the patient perspective and nursing records offer a
repository of data should patient experience survey reveal areas on concern that require
investigation by.
Visibility of Nursing Practice
Record of nursing practice, in paper or electronic format, should not only provide evidence of
care delivered (NMBI 2015) but also be in a format that provides clear information. This creates
the foundation for quality of care planned and delivered (Akhu-Zaheya, Al-Maaitah & Bany Hani
2018). These outcomes can be achieved through the use of a standardised nursing language for
recording practice (Strudwick & Hardiker 2016). Strong evidential criteria for using SNL within
electronic nursing records has emerged; this refers to enhanced visibility of nursing practice
(Herdman & Kamitsuru 2014b; Strudwick & Hardiker 2016). It is also a means to demonstrate
proof that nursing care has been delivered. Interestingly (Rutherford 2008) and others failed to
25
see a difference between nursing documentation in electronic and the paper-based system
(Wang, Yu & Hailey 2015).They noted , however, the nursing process had a role to play.
(Tornvall,Eva; Jansson 2017) acknowledged the evidence for usefulness of SNL rather than
effect on documentation quality but did find it to be essential for measuring, clarifying and
understanding nursing care which demonstrates nurses’ contribution in the health care record.
They remarked that information is easily communicated between the multi-disciplinary team.
Furthermore, (Urquhart et al. 2009) looked at nursing practice and if there was a correlation
between outcomes for patients depending upon the type of record system used, including
paper, electronic, nursing records kept by patients themselves, and records kept in clinics. It
was concluded that changing an entire system may not alter how nurses deliver care nor
improve outcomes for patients. Further work was then suggested with nurses as a main user, in
the development of nursing records.
The importance of documentation in relation to professional and legal responsibilities has been
mentioned. Reference to documentation of care nurses deliver not only makes nursing
contribution visible but also acts as proof that care was given. It serves as a repository of data
should it be required at a later date for an informal/legal enquiry or for research purposes. In
addition the importance of the nursing process in conjunction with SNL ensures the quality of
documentation is fit for purpose (Björvel, Wredling & Thorell-Ekstrand 2003; Kim, Patricia C
Dykes, et al. 2011a; Vassar & Holzmann 2013; Westra et al. 2008) and is superior to paper
based records where data is hard to retrieve and unstructured but may be that the nursing
model needs to support nursing practice (Nykänen, Kaipio & Kuusisto 2012a). (Kim, et al. 2011)
Remark that accurate structure is not present in paper records and is required in order to
capture information of nursing practice. The authors also remark on the presence of redundant
data and suggest that this is an area easily addressed by using electronic records.
The ‘importance of good, and consequences of poor record keeping’ have been emphasised in
Ireland, by such reports as (Department of Health and Children 1999, 2001). The UK, (Francis
2010) delved into the area of record keeping. The report on the Inquiry into the care provided
by Mid Staffordshire Foundation Trust highlighted below-standard nursing documentation as a
contributing factor to the poor quality of care received by patients. Furthermore,
recommendation 3 of the Leas Cross Report by (Professor O’Neill 2006) suggests electronic
records should be used to assist and develop patient centred care plans, monitoring quality of
care delivered as a repository for national statistics on morbidity and mortality. If electronic
records are to become patient record repository of the future nurses need to ensure their
26
practice is visible and the information retrievable across all disciplines, SNL affords this within
patient records (Jones et al. 2010b; Müller-Staub et al. 2006; Tastan et al. 2014a).
Organisational Benefits
Once nursing practice is incorporated into the electronic record organisations or hospital trusts
can benefit financially with additional services or contributions to patient care supplied by
nurses available for costing (Rutherford 2008). Additional data available for research purposes
to improve standards of care (HIQA 2012; Saranto & Kinnunen 2009). Moreover (Fook 2003)
states that clinical audit is the very essence of hospital governance and addresses problems by
providing reliable systematic and unequivocal data to confirm or deny the quality of clinical
services provided. In addition, extending the use of interface terminologies to consumers
(patients & relatives) could improve access to primary care services and support the acute care
sector (Monsen et al. 2006).
2.2.4 Standards for Nursing Records
Standardised Terminologies are necessary to ensure semantic interoperability between
healthcare disciplines, in relation to nursing practice. Several terminologies have been
established to ensure a common standard between, and within healthcare disciplines. These
are necessary to support and capture the diversity of practice, including the nurses assessment,
diagnosis, planned interventions and measurable outcomes of patient care (Kim, Hardiker &
Coenen 2014). Furthermore, (Barthold 2001) remarks that without standardised terms or a
standard language the some information could be misconstrued because of the variety of terms
used within nursing practice. Providing a framework for documentation, in the form of process
(Björvell, Wredling & Thorell-Ekstrand 2002b), a practice model (Björvel, Wredling & Thorell-
Ekstrand 2003b; Darmer et al. 2006; Meehan 2003) and applying standardised terminologies
(Strudwick & Hardiker 2016) allows for the reuse of data for communication (Barthold 2001;
Rutherford 2008), evaluation (Jones et al. 2010a) and also contributes to improved quality and
safe care (Menachemi & Collum 2011; Tastan et al. 2014). It is critical to determine quality and
define standards to avoid ambiguity of information and facilitate the reuse of healthcare data.
27
Professional nursing bodies (NMBI 2015) and government standards (Health Services Executive
2011) regulate the minimum standards for recording of nursing practice in Ireland. Each country
has to determine that national and international standards are met in relation to healthcare
services including documentation e.g. the European Committee for Standardization (CEN), e.g
International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The National Standards Authority of
Ireland (NSAI) is the Irish standards body. (Timmermans & Berg 2003) differentiate standards
into Design; Performance: Terminology; and Procedure for application in recording healthcare
practice. Also, (Kim, Patricia C. Dykes, et al. 2011b) examined nursing documentation on paper
form in preparation for computerised system and highlighted many problems such as non-
standardised documentation fields, frequent and inconsistent use of free-text descriptions
which fails to capture accurate data on a specific area of nursing care and requires more time to
complete resulting in paper audit trails taking more time to complete.
Some ISO standards that apply to electronic patient records include:
❖ ISO 13606 1:2008(en) -> EHR Communication ❖ ISO/TS 4441:2013(en) -> Security and privacy requirements in Electronic Health Record use ❖ ISO/TS 13972:2015(en) -> Details Clinical models within healthcare ❖ ISO 27789:2013(en) -> Audit trails for Electronic Health Records
2.2.5 Terminologies & Data Quality for Nursing Documentation
HIQA believe that the application of quality information supports superior care. Accessing real
time data ensures quality of information and impacts on the care that will be delivered. This is
because good quality timely information contributes to decisions which include medical and
nursing diagnoses. A subsequent care plan, will be formatted in relation to patient information
given verbally by the patient and data in the patient record. Stored data contributes to decision
making and should be available in a timely manner to those who rely on it for critical decision
making, (HIQA 2012).
One of the many interpretations in defining data quality states:
“the totality of features and characteristics of a data set, that bear on its ability to satisfy the
needs that result from the intended use of the data” (Arts, De Keizer & Scheffer 2002).
28
Although data quality can be described as data that is ‘fit for purpose’ (Wang & Strong 1996),
health care services should generate data that is adequately accurate, in a timely manner,
reliable and consistent in order that competent decisions can be made for planning and
delivering effective patient care, (Kerr, Norris & Stockdale 2007). (Keenan 1999) offers SNL as a
unified language that describes care, that is understood by all nurses and conveys the concept
that nurses should agree upon common terminologies to describe assessments, interventions
and outcomes in relation to recording patient care. Similarly, (Bulechek & McCloskey 1995)
describe the coding in Nursing Intervention Classification (NIC) as an aid to represent the very
essence of nursing and (Herdman & Kamitsuru 2014a) show the Nursing Outcome Classification
(NOC) as expected patient outcomes, developed to measure the effects of nursing ensuring
patients at best return to their baseline on discharge from hospital.
(Batini & Scannapieco 2006) explain the consequences of poor data quality on efficiency and
effectiveness on organisations and businesses. They present issues or dimensions related to
data quality such as accuracy, completeness and consistency and point towards “Data Quality
Act in the United States and the “European 2003/98” act brought into force. Collection, storage,
use and sharing of personal data is protected by law under such acts as (Data Protection Act
1988), and more recently the Global Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) (EU 2016). These act
include new guidelines enforced on 25th May 2018 imposing heavy fines for organisations in
non-compliance.
Poor data quality increases healthcare costs (Menachemi & Collum 2011; Wang, Wang &
McLeod 2018). It inhibits communication , obstructs obtaining measurements of performance
and data for research purposes, (Cai & Zhu 2015; Linnen 2016; Pipino, Lee & Wang 2002; Vassar
& Holzmann 2013).
(Gunningberg, Fogelberg-Dahm & Ehrenberg 2009; Paans et al. 2010; Park & Lee 2015)
examined the lack of data entered, either written or entered electronically, as opposed to
‘accuracy’. They reported these deficiencies which mean that patient records are not a valid
source of information on patient care and perhaps do not reflect the rationale behind the
decision for the care planned and delivered (Blair & Smith 2012). (Matney et al. 2012) define
several recognised nursing terminologies or SNL’s that contain nursing diagnoses. All of which
have standard codes that allow data entry and retrieval in EHRs which improves
communication, facilitates research and training. (Scherb & Weydt 2009) infer that nursing
practice is more easily defined when they have a better understanding of the interventions
required in order to ensure particular outcomes are achieved for their patients.
29
Data Quality Assessment Dimensions
Completeness, Accuracy and Consistency are dimensions measured when looking at the quality
of data as (Cai & Zhu 2015), (Thoroddsen et al. 2013), (Batini et al. 2009), (Scannapieco, Missier
& Batini 2005), (Zozus et al. 2014) explain these dimensions that were considered when
collecting the QC-M audit.
The (Institute of Medicine (IOM) 1999) published a report on a national effort to make health
care safer and it opened with the well-known phrase “To Err is Human to forgive divine”. One
important conclusion within the report referred to conditions, process and system failures as
contributors suggesting that organisations should make it harder for healthcare staff to make
mistakes. An example of this is to design health care systems where at every point of patient
contact is made safer. This includes medication prescribing, medication administration and
communication of patient data. Auditing of documentation is one way of making a system
safer, highlighting areas of concern and affording the opportunity to improve areas that do not
meet organisational or national standards. In an article on the consequences of poor data
quality (Redman 1998) refers to this as ‘creating an awareness of the problem’ from a business
perspective acknowledges the difficulty in measuring data quality. Moreover, in the health care
setting medical record reviews present a valuable way to measure quality, improve standards
and perhaps avoid errors as (Findley & Daum 1989) state “Wisdom comes from experience and
experience from mistakes, but they don’t have to be your mistakes”.
2.2.6 Suggestions for Future study on topic of Nursing Documentation
(Saranto et al. 2014) believe that nurse’s opinions towards using SNL are generally positive but
suggest additional education and support from hospital and nursing management will ensure
benefits from SNL, (Johnson, Jefferies & Langdon 2010) presented the Nursing and Midwifery
Content Audit Tool (NMCAT) as a method to measure the quality of documentation and
believed it to be an effective tool. They called for language support software and education
programs regarding writing skills to improve illustration of nursing documentation. Following on
from this the authors tested a program on writing skills incorporating workshops and one to
30
one coaching (Jefferies et al. 2012) emphasising the need for nurses to critically appraise their
documentation. This ensures its eloquence as a communication of patient care to all members
of the multidisciplinary team. The program also explains and supports nurses to document the
patient’s condition, care given and responses to the care using standardised terminologies
readily understood by all relevant readers of the nursing record. Interestingly, (Okaisu et al.
2014) noted the importance of documentation in nursing practice and comment on obstacles in
maintaining standards. Nevertheless the authors theorise that solutions to nursing problems
are far more complicated than merely the education of staff. They believe that building a team
(who already have the necessary skills) to participate in mandatory continuous professional
development (CPD). Together with leadership and evidence based practice at the core will
provide a more complete approach. There is, however training involved in CPD’s.
(Ehrenberg & Ehnfors 1999) looked at the effects of education on documentation. This was
carried out a control group not receiving education, who confidently presented significant
improvements in content of the recording of nurse specific diagnoses, history taking, goals and
discharge planning many of which are poorly reflected in many studies(Akhu-Zaheya, Al-
Maaitah & Bany Hani 2018; Blair & Smith 2012; Lees 2010; Prideaux 2011). While (Lindo et al.
2016) revealed similar weaknesses in documentation practices. It suggested increased
education as one such intervention towards improvement in documentation. In addition a
suggestion was made for the need to focus particularly on discharge planning, nursing
assessment and patient education. All which contribute to improved quality care and are poorly
captured in nursing records.
(SNL) used to document nursing practice, is described as a means of increasing descriptors of
nursing practice, supporting daily care and improving patient safety (Saranto et al. 2014).
(Rutherford 2008) claims that once the nursing language is standardised a term can be
measured and coded. The codes can be used in the clinical or education setting. In principle SNL
gives us standardised words for what we know, plan and do every day for patients. (Rabelo-
Silva et al. 2017), agree describing SNL as a set of terms used to label clinical findings involved in
nursing assessments. (Tastan et al. 2014b) examined SNL and described nursing terminologies
as a body of standardised terms for documenting the practice and science of nursing. In
addition (Rutherford 2008) stresses the importance and capability of SNL not only to enhance
communication among nurses and from nurses. It can be extended to the health care team and
will increase the visibility of nursing influence on patient care.
31
Real Time Collection of Data
(Linnen 2016) points out the need to highlight areas where positive and negative outcomes are
equally measured, and this may be best done if data collection was collected in real time,
thereby ensuring fast, meaningful and easy to use analysis of nursing actions during the course
of care delivery which affords nurses power over their data to improve safety and care of our
patients.
2.3 Summary of Chapter 2
The HSE outlined a strategic business case towards implementation of EHR (HSE 2016),
outlining key developments thus far, for example national systems such as the New-Born
Clinical Management Systems (NB-CMS), Medical Imaging Laboratory System (MedLIS), the
Lighthouse Projects for epilepsy, haemophilia and bipolar disorder and ePharmacy. The
contribution of nursing practice is often paper based and written on pieces of paper during a
shift handover and don’t reflect the extent of the nurses work. Documentation of nursing action
needs to be validated, as nurses attend patients every hour of every day from admission to
discharge. As we move towards electronic records nurses should adopt a unified language in
order that nursing care contribution is embedded in the patient’s health chart, and easily
communicated across all members and levels of the healthcare sector, (Bruylands, M; Paans, W;
Hediger, H; Muller-Staub 2013; Hardiker, Hoy & Casey 2000; Institute of Medicine 2011;
Lundberg et al. 2008).
Many studies report on the use, benefits, use and adaptation of Standardised Nursing
Language(s) (SNL) in nursing documentation (Akhu-Zaheya, Al-Maaitah & Bany Hani 2018;
Cynthia Lundberg et al. 2008; Kelley, Brandon & Docherty 2011b; Tornvall,Eva; Jansson 2017;
Törnvall & Wilhelmsson 2008; Urquhart et al. 2009), many emphasise the need for education
(Jones et al. 2010a) and further training (Gunningberg, Fogelberg-Dahm & Ehrenberg 2009) to
ensure successful implementation. However, few studies report on the actual implementation
process and the use of semi-electronic care plans incorporating a professional practice model
(PPM). The use of semi-electronic care plans uses SNL and is a method of introducing nurses to
the concepts of the language to be used in an electronic health record. (Gunningberg,
Fogelberg-Dahm & Ehrenberg 2009) proposed that documentation in the electronic system will
improve when nurses become more acquainted with SNL, the use of SNL in semi-electronic
records will be looked at against paper records using traditional models of care.
32
Chapter Three [Methods]
3.0 Introduction
The research question was formulated during a transition from an old to new documentation
style and PPM. With a focus on patient safety, previously poor performance of nurses
adherence to standards of documentation practices. The correlation between avoidable
adverse events and poor standards of nurse record keeping both styles were audited, analysed
and compared for differences. Finally, in relation to patient safety a total number of avoidable
adverse events for each style were included in the discussion for comparative reasons.
This chapter presents how a documentation audit using a national concept adapted from the
UK was applied i.e. QC-M on TYC website, to take an in depth look at both forms of records. The
design plan and methodology explain how the questions were addressed.
3.1 Research Design and Methodology
This study was an audit on the documentation of the nursing assessment and resultant care-
plan. It was a prospective non-experimental, point prevalence chart review and cross-sectional
analysis of pre-anonymised and aggregated data of the nursing assessment documentation and
adverse events over a 2 month period. Chart reviews were from a total of four wards, two of
which use a semi-electronic format incorporating SNL. They are currently being implemented
across the hospital, and two using a paper based format, which is being currently phased out
and replaced by semi-electronic care plans. The four wards are medical wards, one of which is
short stay. However charts were only chosen for patients who had been admitted for at least
seventy two hours. Each ward had a total of 30 to 35 patients. There was an average of 1 nurse
33
to 9 patients with between 2 – 3 additional health care assistants for the ward. On one occasion
there was a medical emergency on the ward so the audit was deferred until the following day
to ensure equity as no other ward had emergencies on going during audit period.
The charts were selected using a random sampling technique of patient charts who had been
on the ward for a minimum of seventy two hours. Exclusion criteria applied to patients acutely
unwell. The template, questions, guidelines and audit criteria applied were the same for every
chart. Raw data sets were entered into Excel, coded and prepared for insertion of analysis
graphs. Graphic visualisation of results are easily identified when applying the Red Amber or
Green (RAG) zones to indicate compliance or non-compliance.
3.1.1 Sample and sampling technique.
Random sampling of medical record charts from a total of four wards, focussing on
documentation within the nursing assessment and subsequent plan of care reasoned.
Charts will be only audited from Medical Wards. All wards follow a specific nursing process
which guides nurses towards an individual care plan, two ward locations use semi-electronic
SNL and two wards use paper based documentation. Documentation on the nursing
assessment, using the open access audit tool as per HSE guidelines on clinical audit, appendix
1.0 (Sections from the audit tool that relate to documentation of nursing assessment and
patient risk are highlighted in yellow). Sections that will not be used have been removed or
‘strikethrough’ entered.
The number of charts chosen for audit will be 45% of the total number of patients on the ward
at the time of audit. Initially it was decided to only audit charts for patients who were twenty
four hours on the ward because the admission documentation must be completed within that
time frame, as per the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) guidelines, however, it
was decided to only use charts from patients who were seventy two hours on the ward to
ensure fairness to each area. The usual number of charts audited as per HSE guidelines is 25 %
of the total number of patients currently on the ward, however, as this audit only includes a
total of four wards it was decided to increase the number of charts audited to ensure a
significant sample size obtained for comparative and interpretative purposes.
3.1.2 Audit Instrument
34
Content from the audit tool to be used is based on the web based tool entitled (TYC) which was
developed in the UK and adapted by (NMPDU) QC-M as a measure to monitor patient safety
and promote quality evidence based care, (Excutive 2015). Therefore variables used to collect
data, [Table 4], are defined as a priori and ensure data collected is complete, accurate and
validated as a measurement of data content and quality within the nursing record. The audit
tool is an open access ‘nursing metric audit tool’. Permission, encouragement and guidance to
use the tool and a guide for clinical audit is given by the HSE Quality and Improvement division,
HSE Quality Improvement division, (2015), (HSE 2017), and (eHealth Ireland 2015). In addition
local permission has been requested and granted as part of the organisations ethics approval
process. Director of services NMPDU has also given permission to use the tool. Not all metrics
that are on the open access document (HSE 2017) will be used, and no additional
metrics/questions will be added, Table 4 lists the questions used. Appendix 2 (last section)
contains copy of original template used with care process and metrics.
In order to assess data quality standards, in answering all the questions in the audit tool, factors
such as completeness, accuracy and timeliness were applied to ensure consistent valid and
equitable data suitable for comparison and analysis.
The following questions were answered “YES”, “NO” or “N/A” (not applicable) in respect of
each section outlined of the nursing record.
TABLE 4 AUDIT TOOL INSTRUMENT QUESTIONS TO ASSESS QUALITY OF THE NURSING RECORD
QUALITY CARE PROCESS
METRIC
QUALTY CARE PROCESS INDICATORS
NURSING CARE PLAN:
PERSONAL DETAILS
o The Individual’s name and Healthcare Record Number are on each page
o Presenting complaint/reason for admission/attendance and the date and time are recorded
o Past medical/surgical history are recorded o The allergy status is clearly identifiable on relevant nursing
documentation o Infection status/Alert is recorded
NURSING CARE PLAN o A Nursing Care Plan is evident and reflects the individuals’ current condition
o All risk assessments have been completed within the set timeframe as per local organisational policy
35
o Nursing interventions are individualised, dated, timed and signed
NURSING CARE PLAN: NMBI
GUIDANCE
o All entries dated and timed using 24-hour clock o All written records are legible and signed o All entries are in chronological order o All abbreviations/grading systems are from a national
approved list/system o Alterations/corrections are as per NMBI guidance o All student entries are countersigned
PRESSURE ULCER RISK
ASSESSMENT
o A pressure ulcer risk assessment was conducted on admission/transfer to the unit/ward and was dated, timed and signed by the assessing staff member
o There is evidence of re-assessment of pressure ulcer risk in accordance with organisational policy
o If the individual is identified at risk, a Care Plan with pressure ulcer prevention measures is evident
o If identified at risk, a daily inspection has been recorded on the care plan/skin inspection chart
o If a pressure ulcer present, the grade is recorded on the relevant documentation
FALLS RISK ASSESSMENT o A falls risk assessment was conducted on admission/transfer to the ward/unit, which was dated and signed by the assessing staff member
o If the individual is identified at risk; a Care Plan with identified interventions to minimise the risk of falls is evident
o If the individual has fallen, post falls documentation has been completed
DISCHARGE PLANNING o There is documented evidence of Discharge Planning o There is evidence of family involvement with discharge plan o A predicted date of discharge is documented
3.2 Research Question
“In assessing the quality care process within nursing documentation, are there differences between
paper and semi electronic records?”
36
Data was collected from the nursing section within patients record charts between April and
May 2018. Data collected from the chart will be extracted using HSE QC-M, audit tool, or part
thereof, see Appendix 2 last section for data set chosen for this dissertation. In order to ensure
data collection adhered to protocol for the purpose of this dissertation the author received
training to become an “AUDITOR” to ensure data was collected as per national standards and to
avoid bias and errors.Data was analysed using descriptive statistical methods and content
analysis. No patient shall be identifiable; all data will be collected and stored anonymously with
no traceability as per national and organisational data protection laws.
3.4 Ethical considerations.
(DPC Ireland 2017) and eHealth Ireland 2016 describe the principals around safe collection and
storage of data within an organisation, collection of data for this study is in line with current
data protection Acts of 1988, 2003 and also the new regulation introduced under the General
Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) May 2018.
All data collected will be coded and divided into two categories, wards where charts used paper
based documentation and wards where SNL was used for documentation. Every patient’s
identity shall remain anonymous because no patient details were collected at any time. No
patient Medical Record Number (MRN), name nor Date of Birth (DOB) was recorded at any
point during data collection. Anonymised data extracted from charts will remain on an
Microsoft excel, coded and saved on researchers computer.
3.4.1 Ethics Approval
Approval was sought and granted from:
37
Hospital Research and Innovation Committee,
Hospital Clinical Audit department
Quality/Risk department
Director of NMPDU (National Lead Quality Care-Metrics)
Trinity College Dublin [agreed to terms as laid out by the hospital].
3.5 Summary of Chapter Three
Chapter three presented the study questions and the method used to address the questions,
which was via clinical audit. Full support and a keen interest on the topic was received from the
Research and Clinical audit departments. In addition, permission was sought from the Quality
department to provide statistics for the number of adverse events during the period the audit
was conducted. It was decided not to use this report as further study would be required to
prove that the adverse events were attributable to the finding of this study. The audit tool is
robust and validated, and although it is available on open access additional permission was
sought from the national lead in QC-M with full support and an offer for any additional support
throughout the study.
Chapter Four [Results]
4.1 Introduction
38
Clinical audit was chosen to assess the documentation of nursing practice in newly introduced
records and records that were being phased out. The introduction of a new PPM incorporating
SNL within nursing documentation was implemented to improve adherence to legal and
professional guidelines in relation to documentation of nursing care. In turn this should reflect
on the standards in quality and safety of patient care, and ensure recording nursing practice
format is compatible with electronic records to gain the benefits EHRs bring to healthcare
services, (Darmer et al. 2006; Kent & Morrow 2014; Mahler et al. 2007; McGuire C 2014). The
QC-M tool is used to collect cyclical data to measure standards of documentation. It is entered
onto the TYC website for analysis. The QC-M process uses a framework to measure the quality
standards of nursing care by assessing adherence to national and professional requirements
when it comes to documentation of patient care. Data collected for the purpose of this thesis
was collected on excel. Compliance is measured using traffic light system and referred to as
“RAG Tolerance” i.e.
▪ Red scores are between 0 – 79% and considered Non-Compliance
▪ Amber scores are between 80 -89% and considered Partial-compliance
▪ Green scores are between 90 -100% and considered Compliant
Standard to which practice and subsequent data output for this study is measured against is the
QC-M audit tool, (NMBI 2015) professional guidelines on documentation of practice for nurses,
(Joint Commission International 2015) AOP.1.1; AOP.1.2 and data quality dimensions of quality,
accuracy and timeliness (Scannapieco, Missier & Batini 2005).
During collection of data QC-M guidelines were applied. Dimensions from data quality
assessment are expected in nursing documentation to meet standards. All records must be
complete and written in a timely manner, except in the case of emergencies. Detail regarding
accuracy and timeliness were considered in response to all metrics during assessment. If data in
the nursing record for each metric item was not completed as per standard expected, then the
answer was ‘No’ and the score zero. On the other hand, if the item was completed the answer
was ‘Yes’ and the score was one. The initials N/A are indicated as not applicable, perhaps if
there were not student entries, no risk for pressure ulcer or falls so no care plan expected. The
N/A scores were removed, and a percentage of the total was taken as relevant included data.
4.1.1 Characteristics format for paper and semi-electronic documentation used to collect data
39
A total of 60 charts were collected from four medical wards. There were two formats of
documentation, paper and semi electronic. All charts had identical format and requirement
fields such as demographics, admission details, past medical and surgical history. Both
admission forms have a total of 24 pages. The two types of admission forms required nursing
diagnoses and subsequent care plan was written in free text in paper format and in semi-
electronic format. Then the nurse prints appropriate care plans and files in nurse record folder.
Data in every chart was audited as per NMBI QC-M guidelines and under data quality
dimensions of quantity accuracy, completeness and timeliness. Sections were grouped into the
following categories as per audit tool:
i) Nursing Care Plan -> eight data elements addressed including demographics,
history, presenting complaint, allergy and infection status, nursing diagnoses and
planned interventions.
ii) Nursing Care Plan NMBI Guidance -> six data elements assessing minimum
requirements expected.
iii) Risk Assessment -> Falls
iv) Risk Assessment -> Pressure Ulcer
A summary of characteristics is displayed in Table 5
TABLE 5 CHARACTERISTICS OF CHARTS CHOSEN FOR AUDIT
Medical Ward 1A Medical Ward 1B Sample Size required
as per QC-M cyclical
audit
Paper Based
Sample size (n=30)
Total patient charts
suitable = 28
Sample (n=15)
Total patient charts
suitable = 25
Sample (n=15)
25% of patients on
ward for a minimum of
72 hours (n=6) per
ward total (n=12)
Medical Ward 2A Medical Ward 2B
Semi-Electronic
Sample size (n=30)
Total patient charts
meeting criteria for
audit = 25
Sample (n=15)
Total patient charts
meeting criteria for
audit = 27
Sample (n=15)
25% of patients on
ward for a minimum of
72 hours (n=6) per
ward total (n=12)
40
4.2 Comparison of paper and semi-electronic nursing records: Nursing Care Plan: Personal
The overall differences with compliance in completion of health care records between both
formats in the nursing care plan ranged from 75% in paper to 95% in semi electronic format.
This is a difference between being ranked non-compliant, Figure 5 and compliant Figure 6, in
terms of national and professional expectations. However, the overall score for the
organisations report is amber which is partial compliance at 85%, Figure 7. The target for each
department and the organisation is to reach compliance which is a score of 90%.
Paper records (n=30) scored less than 79% in four metrics, semi-electronic scored above 90% in
all metrics. Of the thirty paper charts audited only ten charts contained a nursing diagnosis and
in comparison, of the thirty semi-electronic records twenty-seven charts correctly identified
and labelled a nursing diagnoses and completed an appropriate NNN care plan. Semi-electronic
and paper records compared equal in three categories, a two tailed un paired T test revealed p
value of 0.05 giving a confidence level of 95% demonstrating significant difference overall that
semi-electronic records were more compliant. The category “Reflects current condition and
Nursing diagnoses” paper records scored only 33% compared to Semi-electronic records at
90%, a second category “Interventions dated & signed” again semi-electronic records scored
93% against only 43% in paper records. Paper records on the other hand contained a direct
quote from the medical diagnosis clinical sheet and not an appropriate nursing language
diagnosis with subsequent care plan. The plan of care was mostly free style written text and
only contained a pre-printed plan of care if an appropriate ‘care bundle’ was added to the free
text section.
TABLE 6 GUIDE TO TRAFFIC LIGHT [RAG] TOLERANCE
Traffic Light (RAG) Tolerance:
Compliance: 90% - 100%
Partial compliance: 80% - 89%
Non-Compliance: 0 -79%
41
Paper charts:
n=30
Semi
electronic
charts:
n=30
Total
Combined
scores for
paper and
semi
electronic:
n=60
FIGURE 6 NURSING CARE PLAN: PERSONAL DETAILS ~ PAPER RECORDS
FIGURE 7 NURSING CARE PLAN: PERSONAL DETAILS ~ SEMI-ELECTRONIC RECORDS
FIGURE 8 PERCENTAGE COMPLIANCE OF NURSING CARE PLAN: PERSONAL DETAILS ~ BOTH
FORMATS
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Name & MRN every page
Reason for admission dated, timed…
Med & Surg History Recorded
Allergy Status
Infection Status
Reflects Nurses Dx & Current…
Risk Assess within timeframe
Entries Date, time and signed
Paper Records ~Score Non-Compliant Red Zone 75%
5 10 15 20 25 30
Name & MRN every page
Reason for admission dated, timed…
Med & Surg History Recorded
Allergy Status
Infection Status
Reflects Nurses Dx & Current…
Risk Assess within timeframe
Entries Date, time and signed
Semi Electronic ~ score Compliant Green Zone 95%
87%100% 98%
90% 83%
62%
93%
68%
Name &MRN every
page
Reason foradmission
dated,timed &signed
Med &Surg
HistoryRecorded
AllergyStatus
InfectionStatus
ReflectsNurses Dx& Currentcondition
Risk Assesswithin
timeframe
EntriesDate, timeand signed
Nursing Care Plan: Personal details Combined score 85% ~ Amber
42
4.3 Comparison of paper and semi-electronic nursing records: Nursing Care Plan NMBI guidance
The Nursing care plan NMBI guidance: section was compared in both forms in terms of
accuracy, completeness and timeliness, acceptable data quality dimensions, which I note are
also relevant and apply as per QC-M standards. However, if each dimension were not met such
at ‘every entry dated, timed and signed”, the score is zero and indicates non-compliance. In an
EHR some fields are mandatory which ensures 100% compliance.
Both forms of documentation revealed areas of non-compliance most notably student entries
were not counter signed by a staff nurse, this metric revealed very poor compliance. Figures 8,
9 & 10.
The use of accepted abbreviations was not at acceptable levels in either format. However, semi-
electronic records demonstrated acceptable compliance at 87% overall for this section but
paper records scored only 62% which brought the combined score to the unacceptable red
zone of non-compliant.
Figures 12 and 13 shows that only 16% of paper records, which is five out of thirty charts,
dated, timed and signed each entry using the twenty-four-hour clock. Semi-electronic records
were 100% compliant. Notably though, every chart in both formats had all entries in
chronological order.
n=30
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Date & timed 24Hr
Legible Ink & Signed
Chronological Order
Abbreviations approved
Errors_corrections
Std Entries Co signed
Paper Records~ Nursing Care Plan:NMBI Guidescore 62% Non Compliant
43
n=30
n=60
FIGURE 9 PAPER RECORD NMBI GUIDE SCORE
FIGURE 10 SEMI ELECTRONIC RECORD NMBI SCORE
FIGURE 11 COMBINED RECORDS: PERCENTAGE NMBI GUIDANCE SCORE
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Date & timed 24Hr
Legible Ink & Signed
Chronological Order
Abbreviations approved
Errors_corrections
Std Entries Co signed
Semi electronic records ~ Nursing Care Plan:NMBI Guide score 87% Partial
Compliance
16
63
100
6754
77
100 97 10087 93
69
DATED TIMED 24HR CLOCK
LEGIBLE, PERMANENT INK,
SIGNED
ENTRIES IN CHRONOLOGICAL
ORDER
ABBREVIATIONS APPROVED
ALTERATIONS CORRECT
STUDENT ENTRIES SIGNED
NMBI Guidance: Nursing care plan
% Compliance in paper records % compliance in semi electronic record
44
n=60
FIGURE 12 NMBI GUIDE ENTRIES IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER FIGURE 13 NMBI GUIDE ENTRIES DATED & SIGNED
4.4 Comparison of paper and semi-electronic nursing records: Risk Assessments 4.4.1 Pressure Ulcer
Both formats of documentation demonstrate non-compliance in Pressure Ulcer care and
prevention. Although semi-electronic records are fully compliant and paper records scored 80%
for assessing patients on admission for pressure ulcer risk only 68% and 69% respectively of
patients who were at risk were commenced on an appropriate preventative care plan. This
would avoid further tissue damage during their admission in hospital.
16
100
0
20
40
60
80
100
Paper Semi-elcetronic
NCP:NMBI Guidance: Dated Timed 24Hr clock
0
20
40
60
80
100
Paper Semi-electronic
NCP:NMBI Guidance: Chronological order
45
n=60
FIGURE 14 PRESSURE ULCER ASSESSMENT & CARE PLAN: PAPER & SEMI ELECTRONIC
RECORDS
4.4.2 Falls Risk
Figures 15 and 16 display the percentage results of compliance for completion of falls risk
assessments. Paper format revealed poor compliance. Semi electronic documentation achieved
scores between partial compliance of 83% in care plan prevention. If patients are at risk and full
compliance at 90% for initial falls risk assessing, however, overall scores achieve an amber
rating of partial compliance between 80% to 83%.
Identifying patients and risk and developing a subsequent falls prevention care plan
demonstrated poor compliance within both formats. In paper records twelve patients were
identified at risk for falls, however three patients were not commenced on care plan, scoring in
red zone of non-compliant. In semi-electronic records nineteen were identified at risk and four
patients were not commenced on care plan scoring in amber zone of partial compliance.
80%
100%
69% 68%
PAPER SEMI ELECTRONIC
Pressure Ulcer Assessment & Care plan ~ % compliance
PU Assess on admission NCP If scores High
46
n=30
n=30
FIGURE 15 FALLS RISK ASSESSMENT COMPLIANCE: PAPER RECORDS
FIGURE 16 FALLS RISK ASSESSMENT COMPLIANCE: SEMI ELECTRONIC RECORDS
102030405060708090
100
Risk Assess withintimeframe
Admission Falls RiskAssess
NCP if falls risk?
Paper Record % Compliance Falls risk assessments in RAG Zone
0
20
40
60
80
100
Risk Assess withintimeframe
Admission Falls RiskAssess
NCP if falls risk?
Semi electronic Record % Compliance Falls Assessment in RAG zone
47
4.5 Comparison of paper and semi-electronic nursing records: Discharge Plan
Results for discharge plan reveal non-compliance, i.e. than 79% compliance, in both formats of
documentation and are presented in figure 16. Semi electronic records demonstrate 83%
compliance of communication with families or next of kin (NOK) in relation to discharge.
However, this fails to formulate an appropriate discharge plan or predicted date of discharge,
paper format scores between 0 – 50% in all area of the discharge planning process metric.
Figure 17 shows comparative of compliance between the two formats where semi-electronic
performance was better although not compliant.
FIGURE 17 DISCHARGE PLANNING
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Documented discharge plan Documented predicted date ofdischarge
Discharge Plan combined total RAG scores for paper & semi electronic records ~ Non Compliant
48
FIGURE 18 DOCUMENTED EVIDENCE OF DISCHARGE PLAN
4.6 Overall results paper versus semi-electronic care plan
Similarities of non-compliance or partial compliance with a RAG rating of 0 to 80% was evident
in both documentation formats in the following sections:
Discharge planning
Initiation of fall prevention nursing care plan
Co-signing of student entries
Pressure Ulcer assess and care plan initiation
Infection
Allergy status
Compliance within the QC-M RAG rating order of compliance were in favour of semi-electronic
records and were found sections:
Nursing Plan: Personal details
Nursing Care Plan; NMBI Guidance.
For comparative purposes the percentage overall results for paper and semi-electronic formats
are presented in: Table 7
Paper Records29%
Semi electronic Records
71%
DOCUMENTED DISCHARGE PLAN
49
TABLE 7 COMPLIANCE RESULTS FOR BOTH FORMS OF DOCUMENTATION
Table 8 displays the RAG order of compliance in both formats. Although there were similarities
of non-compliance and compliance in both records, semi-electronic records demonstrated
compliance more frequently when measured on it’s own right but when combined with paper
record scores the compliance rate fell from green to amber i.e. compliant to partial
compliance.
TABLE 8 TOTAL INDIVIDUAL RESULTS INDICATING RAG ORDER OF COMPLIANCE
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Personal Details:Name and HCRN
Presenting Complaint on Adm, Date & Time
Past medical and surgical History
Allergy Status
Infection Status
Reflects current condition & Nursing diagnoses
Risk Assessments completed
Interventions dated & signed
Dated Timed 24Hr clock
Legible, permanent ink, signed
Entries in Chronological order
Abbreviations approved
Alterations correct
Student entries signed
Risk Assess on Admission
Pressure Ulcer: Reassessement done
Pressure Ulcer: Care Plan Preventative Measures
Pressure Ulcer: Daily Skin Inspection
Falls: Falls risk assessment
Falls: Care Plan with Interventions
Evidence of D/C plan
Individual/family involvement
Predicted date of discharge documented
% compliance in semi electronic record
% Compliance in paper records
Metric
% compliance paper
records
% compliance semi-electronic
records
50
4.7 Limitations
The
liter
atur
e
revi
ew
and
data
colle
ctio
n for
the
audi
t
was
com
plet
ed
by
one
author. However, future study is required in the area of preparing for EHR and the use of semi-
electronic care plans as an introduction to nursing diagnoses and standardised languages. It is
Medication Administration: Name and HCRN every page 83 100
Medication Administration: Allergy Status 97 100
Medication Administration: Omission codes 80 100
Nursing Care Plan: Personal Details: Name and HCRN 73 100
Nursing Care Plan: Presenting Complaint on Admission, Date & Time 100 100
Nursing Care Plan: Past History 97 100 Nursing Care Plan: Allergy Status 90 90
Nursing Care Plan: Infection Status 77 90 Nursing Care Plan: Reflects current condition & Nursing diagnoses 33 90
Nursing Care Plan: Risk Assessments completed 87 100
Nursing Care Plan: Interventions dated & signed 43 93
Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Dated Timed 24Hr clock 16 100
Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Legible, permanent ink, signed 63 97 Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Chronological order 100 100 Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Abbreviations approved 67 87
Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Alterations correct 54 93
Nursing Care Plan: NMBI Guidance: Student entries signed 77 69
Pressure Ulcer: Risk Assess on Admission 77 100
Pressure Ulcer: Re-assessment done 70 81 Pressure Ulcer: Care Plan Preventative Measures 68 58 Pressure Ulcer: Daily Skin Inspection 61 89
Falls: Falls risk assessment 77 90
Falls: Care Plan with Interventions 75 83 Discharge Planning: Documented evidence of D/C plan 58 83 Discharge Planning: Predicted date of discharge documented 7 23
51
most definitely warranted. This study provides a good foundation for others to build and
explore this topic further.
4.8 Discussion
The purpose of this study was to examine and compare two formats of nursing documentation.
One format, paper based used a traditional style nursing process and model RLT and recording
of practice was mostly free text including nursing diagnosis. Semi electronic documentation
adapts elements of process and terminology used in electronic records incorporating NANDA I,
NIC and NOC. In addition, the semi electronic records adapted a new professional practice
model and all staff received training on SNL (NNN) and the new professional practice model
which focusses on patient centred care (Careful Nursing). Assessments and admission booklets
for both formats were similar. The audit criteria or metrics measured were identical for both
formats and measured favourably against the standards expected legally and professionally for
nurses in relation to documentation of their work.
Research questions will be addressed based on the results of the documentation audit, keeping
in mind themes discussed in the literature review (chapter two) all of which are appropriate to
ensure standards of compliance are achieved in the nursing records. This in turn should reflect
good nursing care (Kent & Morrow 2014).
The first question proposed was:
Documentation of the nursing assessment and care plan: Are there differences in compliance in
the recording of nursing care in semi-electronic and paper based systems?
On examining the nursing assessment and care planning section the intention was to highlight
areas of compliance to reassure good quality care processes are in place, also to note areas of
non-compliance which will determine areas of practice that may be of concern and may require
intervention to address deficits in compliance. Most studies focussed on electronic or paper
based and few compared the two. This study was carried out during a period of change in
nursing practice guidelines as preparation for electronic records and to improve standards of
patient care. The use of SNL within semi-electronic care plans provides the ability to have valid
data available for use to measure patient outcomes (Saranto & U. M. Kinnunen 2009). Applying
nursing process and care model as a framework utilises the assessment element of nursing skills
52
to evaluate patients who may be at risk and to diagnose. Measuring symptoms in response to
interventions and documenting an expected outcome is part of nursing care process, the aim is
to treat the symptom and monitor for improvement in symptoms which in turn indicates
improvement in condition (Bulechek, Gloria M; Butcher, Howard K; Dochterman 2013;
Häyrinen, Lammintakanen & Saranto 2010; Herdman & Kamitsuru 2014a; Moorhead, Sue;
Johnson, Marion; Maas, Meridean L; Swanson 2013).
Unfortunately, non-compliance in completing documentation of work done is common in
nursing (Broderick & Coffey 2013; D’Amour et al. 2014; De Marinis et al. 2010). Furthermore,
nurses documentation of care delivered to patients is often an unfinished essay style account of
work done and doesn’t represent the advance nursing process that was involved in the planning
and delivery of care, (Muller-Staub, M, de Graaf-Waar, H, Paans 2016).
In this study, semi electronic records used SNL to diagnose, plan, intervene and assess the care.
Benefits of SNL have been demonstrated as improvement in standards of documentation which
echoes in the quality of care delivered (Jones et al. 2010b; Müller-Staub et al. 2007b). Education
and experience contribute to the affect and effect of SNL in nursing care (Prideaux 2011).
Similarly, Müller-Staub et al (2006) revealed an improvement in the quality of documented
nursing diagnoses, interventions and outcomes when standardised languages are applied to
practice. Results from this study showed similar findings in that nursing diagnoses were
definitely evident in semi electronic records using SNL versus paper records, where diagnoses
were simply copied from the medical notes.
In the assessment of pressure area care and falls prevention the paper nor semi electronic
formats developed an appropriate prevention care plan for either metric. However, (Gallagher
et al. 2008) found that seventy seven percent of pressures ulcers were hospital acquired,
remarking that length of stay and immobility as contributory factors and not risk assessment
documentation. This presents the question and perhaps an indication for further study to
evaluate if any of the patients who didn’t have a preventative care plan suffered a fall or
developed a pressure ulcer.
Secondly: Do paper records fulfil the professional and legal criteria necessary for 21st century
nurses?
53
Nurses are reminded that a patient record is a legal document and may be required in the event
of a prosecution of an offence such as an assault or, at the request of the Coroner depending
upon the circumstances of death and emphasise that the nursing notes should be factual,
accurate and complete (NMBI 2015). Consequences of poor record keeping can place the
patient and nurse at physical and legal risk. Increasing workload and institution policies have
are reasons cited by nurses for non-compliance or poor standards of documentation. There are
no excuses acceptable in regard to patient safety and certainly when legalities are concerned
(Blair & Smith 2012). Documentation audit in relation to legal and professional requirements
include all metrics.
Overall results in this study did show that semi electronic records scored above 90% and are
placed in the compliant zone. This is the target and result hoped for by all healthcare facilities.
However, when their scores were tallied with paper records, again, the overall score slipped
into the partial compliant score zone of amber (79% - 89%) on the QC-M TYC system.
It appears that the structure of paper records do not fulfil the criteria required for
documentation in electronic records, (Kim, Patricia C. Dykes, et al. 2011b) revealed similar
findings. In this study semi electronic were completed to acceptable standards, however the
education and training on SNL could influence the completion of fields such as nursing diagnosis
as nurses using paper records did not receive training on NNN. In semi electronic care plans,
the format supports dating and timing of each entry and once again this area demonstrated
good practice against the paper format where each entry was not dated, signed and timed due
the free text entry system. Remarkably though, paper format scored 100% compliance (n=30)
for the chronological order metric.
The existing format presents a risk, that if there is a line left free at the end of one page and the
last entry of a shift is written on the following page, the nurse on the next shift could write an
entry out of sync. On this occasion it did not happen in any of the records.
Thirdly: Can the application of SNL in nursing care plans improve compliance of nurses’ legal and
professional responsibilities towards documentation practice?
Presentation of nursing documentation is part of the legal and professional requirements
expected (Tornvall, Wahren & Wilhelmsson 2007). Recording of practice should include the
54
nurses’ judgement of the patients’ condition. It should clearly state the plan of care and list
interventions but more importantly demonstrate interventions the nurse has taken to address
particular issues for the patient (Jefferies, Johnson & Griffiths 2010). Important legal
requirements assume the documentation should legible and clearly state the patient’s
condition (NMBI 2015). QC-M measures care processes to reflect compliance in all areas of
professional and legal standards expected from nurses when recording an account of their
practice.
(Thoroddsen, Ehnfors & Ehrenberg 2010) mentioned that the use of SNL in electronic
documentation has the potential to distinguish nurses as a speciality however (Nykänen, Kaipio
& Kuusisto 2012b) raises concern regarding electronic documentation, SNL and PPM with
regard to multidisciplinary information exchange, rather exchange of nursing data to fellow
healthcare professionals and suggest the use of templates that would be easy to apply but
mentions that nursing practice must be supported by an effective nursing model.
SNL was used in semi electronic care plans for this study. According to results, semi electronic
care plans demonstrated compliance, except in areas of discharge planning, pressure ulcer care,
falls prevention and the requirement that student nurses’ signatures are co-signed by a staff-
nurse. Diagnoses and interventions were clearly stated and achieved a score of full compliance
on the QC-M rating compared with paper records, who were in non-compliant zone and
reduced the overall score to See table 8.
Overarching question: “In assessing the quality care process within nursing documentation, are
there differences between paper and semi electronic records?”
Both formats demonstrated acceptable levels of quality in admission data fields, but
implementing appropriate interventions in areas such as pressure area care, discharge planning
and falls prevention did not meet expected standards. Similar findings were reported in a study
by (Paans et al. 2010).
(Wang, Hailey & Yu 2011) found no difference in paper based system versus electronic and
found that electronic records contained fewer nursing diagnoses than paper records. This study
fount quite the opposite with only, (10 vs 27 out of 30) paper records containing an appropriate
55
NNN diagnosis. Overall the semi electronic records achieved higher score in QC-M rating (P <
0.01).
Completeness and accuracy were considered during the audit and strictly adhered to, if the
data wasn’t entered as it should be the score was zero.
Education and visibility of nursing practice
Education and training in reaching appropriate NANDA I diagnoses’ which in turn leads to the
nursing care plan is given as part of the implementation process and ensures nurses are
informed, and aware, how to apply SNL within the nursing process and would therefore
understand the need to apply nursing diagnoses rather than transcribe medical diagnoses from
the clinical notes. Nurses who have completed the paper records would not yet have received
this training. Qualified nurses should be aware that patient symptoms are a response to a
condition and it is the symptoms the nurse treats per se not the medical diagnosis. The
interventions a nurse takes to ensure a patient returns to baseline should be measured. An
absence of symptoms indicate that both the nursing and medical outcomes have been
achieved. It is imperative that nurses action is visible, which is possible via the use of nursing
languages, however nurses need education, training and updates on the topic to ensure it is
logically applied in practice and documentation and to ensure that nursing activity is
appropriately recorded as (De Marinis et al. 2010) observed only 40% of nurses work was
documented in the patients nursing record.
Incomplete entry of work carried out or an omission of work that should be done are evident in
the results from this study and similar to previous studies carried out by (Gunningberg,
Fogelberg-Dahm & Ehrenberg 2009; Paans et al. 2010; Thoroddsen et al. 2013).
All aspects of the nursing record must be captured to ensure compliance and safe effective
care. Areas of non-compliance revealed in this study could be considered when designing an
electronic system. All incomplete functions could be locked out until critical issues addressed,
for example, nursing assessment identified patients at risk for falls and pressure ulcers but did
not initiate a preventative care plan, an electronic system would prevent access to the next
section of the care plan until all appropriate fields are completed.
Also identified from this study are the necessary co-signing of student entries. This field in an
electronic record could require two signatures to ensure safe practice for patient, student and
staff nurse.
56
Date, time and signature entries were also highlighted as incomplete. Electronic records easily
rectify this deficit.
4.9 Summary of Chapter 4
Care processes and associated metrics were used to compare and evaluate both formats of
documentation. Both record formats revealed areas of poor and good performance in relation
to RAG tolerance. However, overall, semi-electronic records achieved a 90% compliance, but
paper records achieved 65% which is non-compliant. The variation in the nursing care plan
metric for evidence of nursing diagnosis and appropriate care plan revealed nurses using semi-
electronic care plans applied the NNN theory appropriately perhaps because they have received
education on SNL and application of the NANDA I, NIC and NOC to practice as part of the
implementation process, of note all diagnoses were appropriate NANDA I terminology with
relevant appropriate NIC and NOC applied.
Areas of poor performance evident in both formats revealed non-compliance with the co-
signing of student entries, signature of a qualified nurse is required for all student entries and is
the professional and legal requirement of the nurse and student nurse. Risk assessment on
admission completed on both paper and semi electronic, however development of a
subsequent falls prevention care plan was not completed.
Accuracy and timeliness applies when assessing each metric, when applied to the paper record
only 16 % of the entries all contained a date, time and signature, the format of semi-electronic
requires completion of this field and scored 100%. Nonetheless, when entries were assessed for
accuracy in relation to chronological order both formats scored 100%, There was, however, a
margin of error presented in the paper records; if an entry was not made on the last line of the
page the subsequent entry may not be entered chronologically.
Chapter Five [Suggestions for future practice]
57
5.1 Education
Development of online learning units and compulsory short duration workshops for ward areas
who are consistently underperforming or not achieving acceptable targets on a monthly basis.
5.2 Cyclical audit
Collection of data
Perhaps analysis from audits would give a more accurate picture if data were collected from the
charts in a sporadic fashion, throughout the entire month and not collected at the same time.
This would allow ward managers to monitor progress and address deficits before the end of the
month rather than receive a report at the end of the month and address issues the following
audit period.
Currently the hospital collects data from the charts in paper format and enter onto the TYC
website on return to the office because of poor internet connection. If this issue is addressed,
Local Area Network (LAN) and wide area networks (WAN) and internet speed are addressed by
the hospital Information and Communication Technology (ICT) department real time data could
be collected, which is the idea behind the TYC website.
5.3 eHealth Solutions
5.3.1 Interactive Metrics Dashboard
Figure 19 demonstrates an interactive dashboard designed for display on screens in nurses’
stations. The addition of slicer to the pivot tables will help filter the data and update fields real-
time to display current status.
58
FIGURE 19 SAMPLE CHARTS FOR INTERACTIVE METRICS DASHBOARD
5.3.2 Electronic Record and Clinical Decision Support system (CDSS)
A recent visit to Galway Clinic to review an electronic health care record system in practice
demonstrated possible solutions to issues identified in this study.
All areas of non-compliance revealed in this study in both paper and semi-electronic records
could be considered as mandatory fields within an electronic record to ensure full compliance is
achieved in quality care metrics. Achieving full compliance is a target, but the overall goal is that
patients receive quality care. Perhaps when designing an electronic system, areas where both
systems demonstrated poor compliance could be captured as mandatory fields. For example,
incomplete data fields of a risk score, allergy status, infection status or high ‘at risk’ score,
mandatory fields would ensure this is addressed by locking out the next function until critical
issues are addressed.
59
Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS)
Information regarding patient infectious disease history is valuable and easily captured in
electronic records. The alert functionality within CDSS provides an invaluable safety feature for
all patients particularly if isolation is required and avoids potential cross contamination.
CDSS system has the capability to provide an alert when necessary interventions are not addressed.
60
Chapter Six [Conclusion]
This study took place during a time of change. A change in documentation of a new nursing
process. Documentation underpins a strategic plan that could affirm the visibility of nursing
practice within electronic records. The delivery of safe care ensures positive outcomes for
patients and their families. Efficient documentation captures care delivery and ensures a
repository of reusable data to support continuity of care, measure, validate or disprove facts
regarding the care. Documentation formats within nursing practice should support nursing
work and reduce the risk of human errors or omissions in the patient record.
Areas of non-compliance were evident on both formats of documentation and must be
addressed in a timely manner as this is an indication of the quality of care delivered. Discharge
planning needs to be addressed if a focus on early discharge to primary care can support acute
services is addressed. Appropriate prevention care-planning is necessary to ensure the delivery
of safe effective care. Student nurses are the future generation staff nurses and need to learn
early in their career the importance of legal and professional accountability in documentation
of their work. Suggestion of real time data collection and an interactive metrics dashboard
displayed in ward areas present an opportunity for Clinical Nurse Managers to acknowledge
areas of good compliance and observe areas underperforming. This will afford time to improve
prior to receiving the month end report and reduce the risk of a patient suffering an adverse
event. Lessons learned from this study prompts the question in relation to preparation and
benefits of EHRs. Metrics highlighted as non-compliant could be considered when designing
electronic records. Mandatory field functionality applied to these metric indicators would
ensure 100% compliance.
61
REFERENCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY
Aggarwal, V. 2002, 'The application of the unified modeling language in object-oriented analysis of healthcare information systems', Journal of Medical Systems.
Akhu-Zaheya, L., Al-Maaitah, R. & Bany Hani, S. 2018, 'Quality of nursing documentation: Paper-based health records versus electronic-based health records', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 27, no. 3–4, pp. e578–89, viewed 24 February 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28981172>.
Arts, D., De Keizer, N. & Scheffer, G.-J. 2002, 'Defining and improving data quality in medical registries: a literature review, case study, and generic framework.', Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA, vol. 9, pp. 600–11.
Barthold, M. 2001, 'Standardizing electronic nursing documentation', Nursing Management.
Batalden, P.B. & Davidoff, F. 2007, 'What is ‘quality improvement’ and how can it transform healthcare?', Quality and Safety in Health Care, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 2–3.
Batini, C., Cappiello, C., Francalanci, C. & Maurino, A. 2009, 'Methodologies for data quality assessment and improvement', ACM Comput. Surv., vol. 41, no. 3, pp. 1–52.
Batini, C. & Scannapieco, M. 2006, Data Quality, Springer.
Björvel, C., Wredling, R. & Thorell-Ekstrand, I. 2003a, 'Improving documentation using a nursing model', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 43, no. 4, pp. 402–410.
Björvel, C., Wredling, R. & Thorell-Ekstrand, I. 2003b, 'Improving documentation using a nursing model', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 43, no.4, pp. 402-410.
Bjorvell, C., Thorell-Ekstrand, I. & Wredling, R. 2000, 'Development of an audit instrument for nursing care plans in the patient record', Quality in Health Care, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 6–13, viewed 8 April 2018, <http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/lookup/doi/10.1136/qhc.9.1.6>.
Björvell, C., Wredling, R. & Thorell-Ekstrand, I. 2002a, 'Long-term increase in quality of nursing documentation: Effects of a comprehensive intervention', Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 34–42.
Björvell, C., Wredling, R. & Thorell-Ekstrand, I. 2002b, 'Long-term increase in quality of nursing documentation: Effects of a comprehensive intervention', Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences,vol. 16, no. 1, pp.39-42.
Blair, W. & Smith, B. 2012, 'Nursing documentation: Frameworks and barriers', Contemporary Nurse Europe, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 160–8, viewed 9 June 2018, <https://www-tandfonline-com.elib.tcd.ie/doi/pdf/10.5172/conu.2012.41.2.160>.
Bowie, P., Bradley, N.A. & Rushmer, R. 2012, 'Clinical audit and quality improvement - Time for a rethink?', Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 42–8.
Broderick, M.C. & Coffey, A. 2013, 'Person-centred care in nursing documentation', International Journal of Older People Nursing, vol. 8, no.4, pp. 309-318.
Brown, D.S., Donaldson, N., Burnes Bolton, L. & Aydin, C.E. 2010, 'Nursing-sensitive benchmarks for hospitals to gauge high-reliability performance.', Journal for healthcare quality : official publication of the National Association for Healthcare Quality, vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 9–17.
Bruylands, M; Paans, W; Hediger, H; Muller-Staub, M. 2013, 'Effects on the quality of nursing care process through an educational program and the use of electronic nursing documentation.', International Journal of Nusing Knowledge, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 163–70.
Bulecheck, G; Butcher, H; Dochterman, J; Wagner, C. 2013, Nursing Interventions calssification (NIC), 6th
62
edn, Elsevier, St Louis, MO.
Bulechek, Gloria M; Butcher, Howard K; Dochterman, Joanne M; Wagner, C.M. 2013, Nursing Intereventions Classification (NIC), Sixth., Elsevier, St Louis, MO.
Bulechek, G.M. & McCloskey, J.C. 1995, 'Nursing interventions classification (NIC).', Medinfo. MEDINFO, vol. 8 Pt 2, p. 1368.
Burston, S., Chaboyer, W. & Gillespie, B. 2014, 'Nurse-sensitive indicators suitable to reflect nursing care quality: A review and discussion of issues', Journal of Clinical Nursing, pp. 1785–95.
Cai, L. & Zhu, Y. 2015, 'The Challenges of Data Quality and Data Quality Assessment in the Big Data Era', Data Science Journal, vol. 14, no. 0, p. 2, viewed 8 April 2018, <http://datascience.codata.org/article/10.5334/dsj-2015-002/>.
Callanan, I. 2012, Title A Practical Guide to Clinical Audit The National Clinical Audit Advisory Group 2011-2012 Name Title Organisation Role, viewed 14 April 2018, <www.hse.ie>.
Callis, N. 2016, Falls prevention: Identification of predictive fall risk factors, Applied Nursing Research, vol.29, pp.53-58.
Choi, J., Jansen, K. & Coenen, A. 2015, 'Modeling a Nursing Guideline with Standard Terminology and Unified Modeling Language for a Nursing Decision Support System: A Case Study.', AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings. AMIA Symposium, vol. 2015, pp. 426–33, viewed 20 June 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26958174>.
Cynthia Lundberg, B.B., Warren, J.J., Brokel, J., Bulechek, G.M. & Dochterman, M. 2008, 'Selecting a Standardized Terminology for the Electronic Health Record that Reveals the Impact of Nursing on Patient Care Association of PeriOperative Registered Nurses', Online Journal of Nursing Informatics, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 1–20, viewed 12 May 2018, <http:ojni.org/12_2/lundberg.pdf>.
D’Amour, D., Dubois, C.-A., Tchouaket, É., Clarke, S. & Blais, R. 2014, 'The occurrence of adverse events potentially attributable to nursing care in medical units: Cross sectional record review', International Journal of Nursing Studies, vol. 51, no. 6, pp. 882–91.
Darmer, M.R., Ankersen, L., Nielsen, B.G., Landberger, G., Lippert, E. & Egerod, I. 2006, 'Nursing documentation audit - The effect of a VIPS implementation programme in Denmark', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 15, no. 5, pp. 525–34.
Data Protection Act 1988, Data Protection Act, (1988) & (2003), Office of the Attorney General, viewed 4 May 2018, <http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1988/act/25/enacted/en/html>.
Department of Health 2013, eHealth Strategy for Ireland. Government Report.
Department of Health and Children 1999, Children First - National Guidelines for the Protection and Welfare of Children, Dublin.
Department of Health and Children 2001, Report of the Inspector of Mental Hospitals For the year ending 31st December 2000, Dublin.
DoH 2008, Building a Culture of Patient Safety Report of the Commission on Patient Safety and Quality Assurance, July., The Stationery Office, Dublin, viewed 2 June 2018, <https://health.gov.ie/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/en_patientsafety.pdf>.
DoH, H. 2018, Results of the National Patient Experience Survey - National Patient Experience Survey, Dublin, viewed 27 May 2018, <https://www.patientexperience.ie/survey-results/>.
Donabedian, A. 1988, 'The Quality of Care: How Can It Be Assessed?', JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association,vol. 260, no.12, pp. 1742-1748.
Donabedian, A. 1997, 'The quality of care. How can it be assessed? 1988.', Archives of pathology &
63
laboratory medicine, vol. 121, no. 11, pp. 1145–50, viewed 5 May 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9372740>.
eHealth Ireland 2015, Nursing & Midwifery Quality Care-Metrics (QC-M) - eHealth Ireland, viewed 12 May 2018, <http://www.ehealthireland.ie/Case-Studies-/Nursing-Midwifery-Quality-Care-Metrics>.
Ehrenberg, A. & Ehnfors, M. 1999, 'Patient records in nursing homes: Effects of training on content and comprehensiveness', Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences,vol. 13, no.2, pp.72-82.
EU 2016, 'Home Page of EU GDPR', EU GDPR Terminal.
Excutive, H.S. 2015, Guiding Framework for the Implementation of Nursing and Midwifery Quality Care Metrics, Ireland.
Findley, T.W. & Daum, M.C. 1989, 'Research in physical medicine and rehabilitation. III. The chart review or how to use clinical data for exploratory retrospective studies.', American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation / Association of Academic Physiatrists.
Florin, J., Ehrenberg, A., Ehnfors, M. & Björvell, C. 2012, 'ARTICLE IN PRESS A comparison between the VIPS model and the ICF for expressing nursing content in the health care record', International Journal of Medical Informatics, viewed 18 June 2018, <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.05.016>.
Fook, L. 2003, 'Principles of Best Practice in Clinical Audit; National Institute of Clinical Excellence', Age and Ageing, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 467-b-468.
Foulkes, M. 2011, 'Nursing metrics: measuring quality in patient care.', Nursing Standard, vol. 25, no. 42, pp. 40–45.
Francis, R. 2010, 'Press Statement', The Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust Public Inquiry, pp. 1–9.
Frank-Stromborg, M., Christensen, A. & Elmhurst-Do, D. 2001, 'Nurse documentation: not done or worse, done the wrong way--Part II.', Oncology nursing forum, vol. 28, no. 5, pp. 841–846.
Frey, M.A., Sieloff, C.L. & Norris, D.M. 2002, 'King’s Conceptual System and Theory of Goal Attainment: Past, Present, and Future', Nursing Science Quarterly, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 107–112.
Gallagher, P., Barry, P., Hartigan, I., McCluskey, P., O’Connor, K. & O’Connor, M. 2008, 'Prevalence of pressure ulcers in three university teaching hospitals in Ireland', Journal of Tissue Viability, vol. 17, no. 4, pp. 103–109.
Giltenane, M., Frazer, K. & Sheridan, A. 2016, 'Evaluating the impact of a quality care-metric on public health nursing practice: protocol for a mixed methods study', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 72, no. 8, pp. 1935–1947, viewed 19 June 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/jan.12964>.
Greenhalgh, T., Robert, G., Macfarlane, F., Bate, P., Kyriakidou, O. & Peacock, R. 2005, 'Storylines of research in diffusion of innovation: a meta-narrative approach to systematic review', Social Science & Medicine, vol. 61, no. 2, pp. 417–430.
Griffith, P., Jones, S., Maben, J. & Murrels, T. 2008, State of the Art Metrics for Nursing: A Rapid Appraisal., London.
Gunningberg, L., Fogelberg-Dahm, M. & Ehrenberg, A. 2009, 'Improved quality and comprehensiveness in nursing documentation of pressure ulcers after implementing an electronic health record in hospital care', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 18, no. 11, pp. 1557–1564.
Hardiker, N.R., Hoy, D. & Casey, A. 2000, 'Standards for nursing terminology.', Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA, pp. 523–528.
Häyrinen, K., Lammintakanen, J. & Saranto, K. 2010, 'Evaluation of electronic nursing documentation-Nursing process model and standardized terminologies as keys to visible and transparent nursing',
64
International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 79, no. 8, pp. 554–564.
Health Service Executive 2018, Nursing and Midwifery Quality Care-Metrics: Acute Care Research Report., Dublin, viewed 24 June 2018, <https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/onmsd/safecare/qcm/acute-services.pdf>.
Health Services Executive 2011, HSE Standards & Recommended Practices for Healthcare Records Management., Dublin.
Herdman, T.H. (Ed) & Kamitsuru, S. (Ed) 2014a, 'NANDA International nursing diagnoses: definitions and classification 2012-2014', Nursing diagnoses 2015-2017 : definitions and classification, pp. 31–561.
Herdman, T.H. (Ed) & Kamitsuru, S. (Ed) 2014b, 'NANDA International nursing diagnoses: definitions and classification 2015-2017', Nursing diagnoses 2015-2017 : definitions and classification, pp. 31–561.
HIQA 2012, Guidance on information governance for health and social care services in Ireland, Dublin, viewed 6 May 2018, <https://www.hiqa.ie/system/files/Guidance-on-information-governance.pdf>.
HIQA 2013, Guidance on Developing Key Performance Indicators and Minimum Data Sets to Monitor Healthcare Quality, Health Information and quality Authority, Dublin.
HSE 2016, National Electronic Health Record (NEHR) Strategic Business Case, no. May, pp. 1–124, viewed 21 April 2018, <http://www.ehealthireland.ie/Strategic-Programmes/Electronic-Health-Record-EHR-/Progress/National-Business-Case.pdf>.
HSE 2017, Measurement for Quality - Ireland’s Health Service, viewed 5 May 2018, <https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/measurementquality/>.
HSE 2018, 'National Service Plan 2018', National Service Plan, viewed 20 May 2018, <https://www.hse.ie/eng/services/publications/serviceplans/national-service-plan-2018.pdf>.
HSE Quality Improvement division n.d., Routine Audit Tools Acute Hospital Services - Ireland’s Health Service, viewed 15 April 2018, <https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-programmes/auditsupport/raudittoolsacute.html>.
Institute of Medicine 2010, The Healthcare Imperative: Lowering Costs and Improving Outcomes, The Healthcare Imperative: Lowering Costs and Improving Outcomes: Workshop Series Summary.
Institute of Medicine 2011, The future of nursing leading change, advancing health, The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health.
Institute of Medicine (IOM) 1999, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, New York.
Jacobs, B.B. 2013, 'An Innovative Professional Practice Model', Advances in Nursing Science, vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 271–288.
Jefferies, D., Johnson, M. & Griffiths, R. 2010, 'A meta-study of the essentials of quality nursing documentation', International Journal of Nursing Practice, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 112–24.
Jefferies, D., Johnson, M. & Nicholls, D. 2011, 'Nursing documentation: How meaning is obscured by fragmentary language', Nursing Outlook, vol. 59, no. 6.
Jefferies, D., Johnson, M., Nicholls, D. & Lad, S. 2012, 'A ward-based writing coach program to improve the quality of nursing documentation', Nurse Education Today,vol. 32, no.6, pp.647-651.
Johnson, M., Jefferies, D. & Langdon, R. 2010, 'The Nursing and Midwifery Content Audit Tool (NMCAT): A short nursing documentation audit tool', Journal of Nursing Management, vol. 18, no. 7, pp. 832–845.
65
Joint Commission International 2015, 'Joint Commission International Accreditation Standards for Hospitals Including Standards for Academic Medical Centre Hospitals', Joint Commission International Accreditation Standards for Hospitals, viewed 4 July 2018, <https://www.jointcommissioninternational.org/assets/3/7/JCI_Standards_Only_6th_Ed_Hospital.pdf>.
Jones, D., Lunney, M., Keenan, G. & Moorhead, S. 2010a, 'Standardized nursing languages: essential for the nursing workforce.', Annual Review of Nursing Research, vol. 28, pp. 253–94.
Jones, D., Lunney, M., Keenan, G. & Moorhead, S. 2010b, 'Standardized Nursing Languages<BR> Essential for the Nursing Workforce', Annual Review of Nursing Research, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 253–294.
Keenan, G. 1999, 'Use of standardized nursing language will make nursing visible.', Michigan Nurse, vol. 2, no. 72, pp. 12–13.
Kelley, T.F., Brandon, D.H. & Docherty, S.L. 2011a, 'Electronic Nursing Documentation as a Strategy to Improve Quality of Patient Care', Journal of Nursing Scholarship, vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 154–162.
Kelley, T.F., Brandon, D.H. & Docherty, S.L. 2011b, 'Electronic Nursing Documentation as a Strategy to Improve Quality of Patient Care', Journal of Nursing Scholarship, vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 154–62, viewed 13 May 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/j.1547-5069.2011.01397.x>.
Kent, P. & Morrow, K. 2014, 'Better documentation improves patient care', Nursing Standard, vol. 29, no. 14, pp. 44–51.
Kerr, K., Norris, T. & Stockdale, R. 2007, 'Data quality information and decision making: A healthcare case study', ACIS 2007 Proceedings - 18th Australasian Conference on Information Systems, pp. 1017–1026.
Kim, H., Dykes, P.C., Thomas, D., Winfield, L.A. & Rocha, R.A. 2011a, 'A closer look at nursing documentation on paper forms: Preparation for computerizing a nursing documentation system', Computers in Biology and Medicine, vol. 41, no. 4, pp. 182–189.
Kim, H., Dykes, P.C., Thomas, D., Winfield, L.A. & Rocha, R.A. 2011b, 'A closer look at nursing documentation on paper forms: Preparation for computerizing a nursing documentation system', Computers in Biology and Medicine, vol. 41, no. 4, pp. 182–189.
Kim, T.Y., Coenen, A. & Hardiker, N. 2012a, 'Semantic mappings and locality of nursing diagnostic concepts in UMLS', Journal of Biomedical Informatics, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 93–100, viewed 29 October 2017, <http://www.sciencedirect.com.elib.tcd.ie/science/article/pii/S1532046411001626?_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_origin=gateway&_docanchor=&md5=b8429449ccfc9c30159a5f9aeaa92ffb&ccp=y>.
Kim, T.Y., Coenen, A. & Hardiker, N. 2012b, 'Semantic mappings and locality of nursing diagnostic concepts in UMLS', Journal of Biomedical Informatics, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 93–100.
Kim, T.Y., Hardiker, N. & Coenen, A. 2014, 'Inter-terminology mapping of nursing problems', Journal of Biomedical Informatics,vol.49. pp.213-220.
Kramer, M., Schmalenberg, C., Maguire, P., Brewer, B.B., Burke, R., Chmielewski, L., Cox, K., Kishner, J., Krugman, M., Meeks-Sjostrom, D. & Waldo, M. 2009, 'Walk the talk: Promoting control of nursing practice and a patient-centered culture', Critical Care Nurse,vol.29, no.3, pp.77-93.
Lee, T.H. 2015, 'Performance metrics as drivers of quality: Getting to second gear', Circulation.
Lees, L. 2010, 'Improving the quality of nursing documentation on an acute medicine unit.', Nursing times, vol. 106, no. 37, pp. 22–26.
Lindo, J., Stennett, R., Stephenson-Wilson, K., Barrett, K.A., Bunnaman, D., Anderson-Johnson, P., Waugh-Brown, V. & Wint, Y. 2016, 'An Audit of Nursing Documentation at Three Public Hospitals in
66
Jamaica', Journal of Nursing Scholarship, vol. 48, no. 5, pp. 499–507, viewed 8 April 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/jnu.12234>.
Linnen, D. 2016, 'The promise of big data', Nursing, vol. 46, no. 5, pp. 28–34.
Lundberg, C.B., Warren, J.J., Brokel, J., Bulechek, G.M., Butcher, H.K., Dochterman, J.M., Johnson, M., Martin, K.S., Spisla, C., Swanson, E. & Giarrizzo-wilson, S. 2008, 'Selecting a Standardized Terminology for the Electronic Health Record that Reveals the Impact of Nursing on Patient Care', Online Journal of Nursing Informatics, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 1–20.
Maben, J. & Griffiths, P. 2012, High Quality Care Metrics for Nursing, National Nursing Research Unit, King’s College London, London, viewed 19 June 2018, <http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/346019/1/High-Quality-Care-Metrics-for-Nursing----Nov-2012.pdf>.
Mahler, C., Ammenwerth, E., Wagner, A., Tautz, A., Happek, T., Hoppe, B. & Eichstädter, R. 2007, 'Effects of a computer-based nursing documentation system on the quality of nursing documentation', Journal of Medical Systems, vol. 31, no. 4, pp. 274–82.
De Marinis, M.G., Piredda, M., Pascarella, M.C., Vincenzi, B., Spiga, F., Tartaglini, D., Alvaro, R. & Matarese, M. 2010, '‘If it is not recorded, it has not been done!’? Consistency between nursing records and observed nursing care in an Italian hospital', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 19, no. 11–12, pp. 1544–1552.
Matney, S.A., Warren, J.J., Evans, J.L., Kim, T.Y., Coenen, A. & Auld, V.A. 2012, 'Development of the nursing problem list subset of SNOMED CT®', Journal of Biomedical Informatics, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 683–8, viewed 17 November 2017, <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532046411002176>.
McCrae, N. 2011, 'Whither Nursing Models? The value of nursing theory in the context of evidence-based practice and multidisciplinary health care', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 222–9, viewed 7 May 2018, <https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/8a53/4da7e9a595747f0dfe6108eb3a87441aac7e.pdf>.
McGuire C, R.D. 2014, 'Developing leadership roles in nursing and midwifery.', Nursing Standard, vol. 29, no. 9, pp. 43–49.
Meehan, T.C. 2003, 'Careful nursing: A model for contemporary nursing practice', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 99–107.
Meehan, T.C. 2012, 'The Careful Nursing philosophy and professional practice model', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol.10. no 8, pp.990-1001.
Menachemi, N. & Collum, T.H. 2011, 'Benefits and drawbacks of electronic health record systems.', Risk management and healthcare policy, vol. 4, pp. 47–55, viewed 28 April 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22312227>.
Middleton, B., Bloomrosen, M., Dente, M.A., Hashmat, B., Koppel, R., Overhage, J.M., Payne, T.H., Rosenbloom, S.T., Weaver, C. & Zhang, J. 2013, 'Enhancing patient safety and quality of care by improving the usability of electronic health record systems: Recommendations from AMIA', Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, vol. 20, no. E1, pp. 2–8, viewed 12 May 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23355463>.
Monsen, K.A., Fitzsimmons, L.L., Lescenski, B.A., Lytton, A.B., Schwichtenberg, L.D. & Martin, K.S. 2006, 'A public health nursing informatics data-and-practice quality project', Comput Inform Nurs, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 152–8.
Moorhead, Sue; Johnson, Marion; Maas, Meridean L; Swanson, E. 2013, Nursing Outcomes Classification (N0C), Fifth., Elsevier, St Louis, MO.
Muller-Staub, M, de Graaf-Waar, H, Paans, W. 2016, 'An Internationally Consented Standard for Nursing Process-Clinical Decision Support Systems in Electronic Health Records', CIN: Computers,
67
Informatics, Nursing., vol. 34, no. 11, pp. 493–502.
Müller-Staub, M., Lavin, M.A., Needham, I. & van Achterberg, T. 2006, 'Nursing diagnoses, interventions and outcomes Application and impact on nursing practice: systematic review', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 56, no. 5, pp. 514–531.
Müller-Staub, M., Needham, I., Odenbreit, M., Lavin, M.A. & van Achterberg, T. 2007a, 'Improved quality of nursing documentation: results of a nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes implementation study.', International journal of nursing terminologies and classifications : the official journal of NANDA International.
Müller-Staub, M., Needham, I., Odenbreit, M., Lavin, M.A. & van Achterberg, T. 2007b, 'Improved quality of nursing documentation: results of a nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes implementation study.', International journal of nursing terminologies and classifications : the official journal of NANDA International, pp. 5–17.
Mykkänen, M., Saranto, K. & Miettinen, M. 2012, 'Nursing audit as a method for developing nursing care and ensuring patient safety.', Nursing informatics ... : proceedings of the ... International Congress on Nursing Informatics, vol. 2012, no. 18, p. 301.
National Clinical Effectivemess Committee 2015, NCEC Prioritisation and Quality Assurance Processes for National Clinical Audit Prioritisation and Quality Assurance for National Clinical Audit, no. September, pp. 0–20, viewed 2 June 2018, <https://health.gov.ie/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Prioritisation-and-Quality-Assurance-for-National-Clinical-Audit.pdf>.
Neuman, B. & Fawcett, J. 2011, 'The Neuman Systems Model', Pearsons.
NMBI 2015, Recording Clinical Practice, Professional guidance, viewed 22 April 2018, <https://www.nmbi.ie/nmbi/media/NMBI/Publications/recording-clinical-practice-professional-guidance.pdf?ext=.pdf>.
Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland 2014, 'Code of Professional Conduct and Ethics for Registered Nurses and Registered Midwives', Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland, Dublin, viewed 19 June 2018, <www.nmbi.ie>.
Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) 2015, 'NMBI Code of Professional Conduct and Ethics - Standards and Guidance', NMBI Publication, viewed 10 December 2017, <https://www.nmbi.ie/Standards-Guidance/Code>.
Nykänen, P., Kaipio, J. & Kuusisto, A. 2012a, 'Evaluation of the national nursing model and four nursing documentation systems in Finland - Lessons learned and directions for the future', International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 81, no. 8, pp. 507–520.
Nykänen, P., Kaipio, J. & Kuusisto, A. 2012b, 'Evaluation of the national nursing model and four nursing documentation systems in Finland - Lessons learned and directions for the future', International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 81, no. 8, pp. 507–520.
O’Connor, S. & Hardiker, N. 2017, 'Derek Hoy: A legacy for Nursing Informatics in Scotland', International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 104, pp. 126–127.
Okaisu, E., Kalikwani, F., Wanyana, G. & Coetzee, M. 2014, 'Improving the quality of nursing documentation: An action research study', Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, vol. 15, p. 213.
ONMSD 2013, 'Developing and implementing nursing and midwifery metrics in HSE Dublin North East.', Office of Nursing and Midwifery Services, vol. 4, no. 1, p. 9.
Orem, D. 2003, 'Self Care Theory in Nursing : Selected Papers of Dorothea Orem', Springer Publishing Company.
OʼBrien, A., Weaver, C., Settergren, T. (Tess), Hook, M.L. & Ivory, C.H. 2015, 'EHR Documentation', Nursing Administration Quarterly, vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 333–339.
68
Paans, W., Sermeus, W., Nieweg, R.M.B. & Van Der Schans, C.P. 2010, 'Prevalence of accurate nursing documentation in patient records', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 66, no. 11, pp. 2481–2489.
Park, H. & Lee, E. 2015, 'Incorporating Standardized Nursing Languages Into an Electronic Nursing Documentation System in Korea: A Pilot Study', International Journal of Nursing Knowledge, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 35–42.
Parkman, C. a & Loveridge, C. 1994, 'From nursing service to professional practice.', Nursing management,vol. 25, no.3, pp. 63-68.
Phillips, K.. 2010, 'Roy Adaptation Model: Sister Callista Roy', Nursing theorists and their work, pp. 365.
Pipino, L.L., Lee, Y.W. & Wang, R.Y. 2002, 'Data quality assessment', Communications of the ACM, vol. 45, no. 4, p. 211.
Prideaux, A. 2011, 'Issues in nursing documentation and record-keeping practice', British Journal of Nursing, vol. 20, no. 22, pp. 1450–1454.
Professor O’Neill 2006, Leas Cross Report, Dublin, viewed 14 June 2018, <http://www.hse.ie/eng/services/publications/olderpeople/Leas-Cross-Report-pdf>.
Rabelo-Silva, E.R., Dantas Cavalcanti, A.C., Ramos Goulart Caldas, M.C., Lucena, A. de F., Almeida, M. de A., Linch, G.F. da C., da Silva, M.B. & Müller-Staub, M. 2017, 'Advanced Nursing Process quality: Comparing the International Classification for Nursing Practice (ICNP) with the NANDA-International (NANDA-I) and Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC)', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 26, no. 3–4, pp. 379–387.
Redman, T.C. 1998, 'The Impact of poor data quality on the typical enterprise.', COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM February, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 79–82.
Richter, J.P. & Muhlestein, D.B. 2017, 'Patient experience and hospital profitability: Is there a link?', Health Care Management Review,vol 42, no. 3, pp.247-257.
Roper, N., Logan, W.W. & Tierney, A.J. 2000, The Roper-Logan-Tierney model of nursing : based on activities of living, Churchill Livingstone, London.
Royal College of Nursing 2011, 'Nursing dashboards-Measuring Quality', Report, viewed 22 June 2018, <https://www.rcn.org.uk/-/media/royal-college-of-nursing/.../2012/.../pub-004198.pdf>.
Rutherford, M. a. 2008, 'Standardized nursing language: What does it mean for nursing practice?', Online Journal of Issues in Nursing, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 1–7.
Saranto, K. & Kinnunen, U.-M. 2009, 'Evaluating nursing documentation - research designs and methods: systematic review', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 65, no. 3, pp. 464–76, viewed 8 April 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2008.04914.x>.
Saranto, K., Kinnunen, U.-M., Kivekäs, E., Lappalainen, A.-M., Liljamo, P., Rajalahti, E. & Hyppönen, H. 2014, 'Impacts of structuring nursing records: a systematic review', Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, vol. 28, no. 4, pp. 629–47, viewed 5 May 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/scs.12094>.
Saranto, K. & Kinnunen, U.M. 2009, 'Evaluating nursing documentation - Research designs and methods: Systematic review', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 65, no. 3, pp. 464–76.
Savitz, L., Jones, C. & Bernard, S. 2005, 'Quality indicators sensitive to nurse staffing in acute care settings', Advances in Patient Safety: From Research to Implementation, vol. 4, pp. 375–386.
Scannapieco, M., Missier, P. & Batini, C. 2005, 'Data Quality at a Glance', Datenbank-Spektrum, vol. 14, no. January, pp. 6–14.
Scherb, C. a & Weydt, A.P. 2009, 'Work complexity assessment, nursing interventions classification, and
69
nursing outcomes classification: making connections.', Creative nursing, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 16–22.
Shortliffe, E.H. & Cimino, J.J. 2014, Biomedical Informatics Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine, Biomedical Informatics. Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine.
Slatyer, S., Coventry, L.L., Twigg, D. & Davis, S. 2016, 'Professional practice models for nursing: A review of the literature and synthesis of key components', Journal of Nursing Management, vol. 24, no. 2, pp. 139–150.
Stallings-Welden, L.M. & Shirey, M.R. 2015, 'Predictability of a professional practice model to affect nurse and patient outcomes', Nursing Administration Quarterly, vol. 39, no. 3, pp. 199–210.
Strudwick, G. & Hardiker, N.R. 2016, 'Understanding the use of standardized nursing terminology and classification systems in published research: A case study using the International Classification for Nursing Practice®', International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 94, pp. 215–221, viewed 17 December 2017, <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1386505616301411?via%3Dihub>.
Sunderland, M. 2009, 'Metrics enable the profession to take control of nursing quality', Nursing Times, vol. 105, no. 46, p. 11.
Tange, H.J. 1995, 'The paper-based patient record: Is it really so bad?', Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine, vol. 48, no. 1–2, pp. 127–31, viewed 14 June 2018, <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/016926079501672G>.
Tastan, S., Linch, G.C.F., Keenan, G.M., Stifter, J., McKinney, D., Fahey, L., Lopez, K.D., Yao, Y. & Wilkie, D.J. 2014a, 'Evidence for the existing American Nurses Association-recognized standardized nursing terminologies: A systematic review', International Journal of Nursing Studies, vol. 51, no. 8, pp. 1160–1170.
Tastan, S., Linch, G.C.F., Keenan, G.M., Stifter, J., McKinney, D., Fahey, L., Lopez, K.D., Yao, Y. & Wilkie, D.J. 2014b, 'Evidence for the existing American Nurses Association-recognized standardized nursing terminologies: A systematic review', International Journal of Nursing Studies, vol. 51, no. 8, pp. 1160–1170.
TheMidStaffordshireFoundationTrust 2013, Report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS foundation Trust Public inquiry, Volume 1: Analysis of Evidence and Lessons Learned (part 1), The Stationery Office, London.
Thoroddsen, A., Ehnfors, M. & Ehrenberg, A. 2010, 'Nursing specialty knowledge as expressed by standardized nursing languages', International Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 69–79.
Thoroddsen, A., Sigurjónsdóttir, G., Ehnfors, M. & Ehrenberg, A. 2013, 'Accuracy, completeness and comprehensiveness of information on pressure ulcers recorded in the patient record', Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 84–91.
Timmermans, S. & Berg, M. 2003, The Gold Standard: The Challenge Of Evidence-Based Medicine, Southern Medical Journal, Temple University Press, Philadelphia.
Tornvall,Eva; Jansson, I. 2017, 'Preliminary Evidence for the Usefulness of Standardized Nursing Terminologies in Different fields of Application: A Literature Review', International Journal of Nusing Knowledge, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 109–127.
Tornvall, E., Wahren, L.K. & Wilhelmsson, S. 2007, 'Impact of primary care management on nursing documentation.', Journal of Nursing Management, vol. 15, pp. 634–642.
Törnvall, E. & Wilhelmsson, S. 2008, 'Nursing documentation for communicating and evaluating care', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 17, no. 16, pp. 2116–2124.
Tsai, T.C., Jha, A.K., Gawande, A.A., Huckman, R.S., Bloom, N. & Sadun, R. 2015, 'Hospital board and management practices are strongly related to hospital performance on clinical quality metrics',
70
Health Affairs.
Tubaishat, A., Tawalbeh, L.I., AlAzzam, M., AlBashtawy, M. & Batiha, A.-M. 2015, 'Electronic versus paper records: documentation of pressure ulcer data', British Journal of Nursing, vol. 24, no. Sup6, pp. S30–537.
Urquhart, C., Currell, R., Grant, M.J. & Hardiker, N.R. 2009, 'Nursing record systems: Effects on nursing practice and healthcare outcomes', Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, no. 1, pp. 1–67, viewed 5 May 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/14651858.CD002099.pub2>.
Vassar, M. & Holzmann, M. 2013, 'The retrospective chart review: important methodological considerations', Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions, vol. 10, p. 12, viewed 6 June 2018, <http://www.jeehp.org/DOIx.php?id=10.3352/jeehp.2013.10.12>.
Wang, N., Hailey, D. & Yu, P. 2011, 'Quality of nursing documentation and approaches to its evaluation: A mixed-method systematic review', Journal of Advanced Nursing, pp. 1858–1875.
Wang, N., Yu, P. & Hailey, D. 2015, The quality of paper-based versus electronic nursing care plan in Australian aged care homes: A documentation audit study, vol. 84, no.8,,pp.561-569.
Wang, N., Yu, P., Hailey, D. & Oxlade, D. 2011, 'Developing measurements of quality of electronic versus paper-based nursing documentation in Australian aged care homes', Electonic Journal of Healh Informatics
Wang,R.Y & Strong, D.M. 1996, 'Beyond Accuracy: What Data Quality Means to Data Consumers', Journal of Management Information Systems, vol. 12, no. 4, pp.5-33.
Wang, T., Wang, Y. & McLeod, A. 2018, 'Do health information technology investments impact hospital financial performance and productivity?, International Journal of Accounting Information Systems, vol. 28, pp.1 -13
Westra, B.l., Dealaney, C.w., Konicek, D. & Keenan, G. 2008, 'Nursing standards to support the electronic health record', Nursing Outlook, vol. 56, no.5.
Zozus, M.N., Hammond, W.E., Green, B.B., Kahn, M.G., Richesson, R.L., Rusincovitch, S.A., Simon, G.E. & Smerek, M.M. 2014, Assessing Data Quality, viewed 7 May 2018, <https://www.nihcollaboratory.org/Products/Assessing-data-quality_V1 0.pdf>.
71
Appendices:
Appendix 1: Semi electronic care-plan
72
73
74
75
Appendix 1a: Free text paper record care-plan
76
Appendix 2: Ethics Proposal & Responses to Ethics Committee
Research proposal Outline
6.2.1 Name and relevant background of researcher (state employment location unit), Educational
Institution
Principal Investigator : Ms Lorraine Lalor, CNM 3, Nurse Education & Practice Development Centre,
St Vincent’s University Hospital (SVUH) & Year 2 MSC Health Informatics @ Trinity College Dublin.
6.2.2 Introduction
Background and statement of issue for Research Study including a summary literature review.
For decades now eHealth Ireland has been working in the background to produce a national
Electronic Health Record (EHR), and in May 2016 a business case was finalised and approved by the
Health Service Executive (HSE) (eHealth Ireland 2017),. This programme represents a significant
transformation in the use of technology and data to support safe and efficient care for future
generations. As we prepare towards electronic Health Records, this study will compare semi-
electronic and paperbased documentation of nursing assessment.
Nursing processes are recorded are in A) semi-electronic format, using NANDA I, Nursing
Interventions Classification (NIC) and Nursing Outcomes Classifications (NOC) (NNN), and B)
traditional paper based nursing care plans using traditional Roper Logan Tierney nursing
process,(Roper et al 2000). Comparisons will be deduced from both styles of documentation.
Therefore literature on the topic is presented as a prelude and to demonstrate a sample of current
work in this field.
The (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI), 2015)assert legal and professional issues
regarding the management and collation of nursing documentation and believe that the quality of
records maintained is a direct reflection of the quality of care delivered to patients. Inaccurate
77
documentation of a patient’s care plan, the actual care delivered, and the consequences of poor
documentation can lead to adverse events for patients.
The development of nursing language to be used for documentation is, through research, evolving
since the 1980’s with the use of Standardised Nursing Language (SNL) being described as a means of
increasing descriptors of nursing practice, supporting daily care and improving patient safety
(Saranto et al., 2014).
(Rutherford 2008) believes (SNL) use in documentation is vital to the nursing profession and has
many benefits, including better communication, increased visibility of nursing interventions and the
role nurses play in patient care. (Clarke & Lang, 1992) focussed on actual nursing diagnoses rather
than medical diagnoses and the recognition of an explicit language to better establish nursing
standards and ensure patient safety.
(Scherb and Weydt, 2009) infer that nursing practice is more easily defined when they have a better
understanding of the interventions required that ensure particular outcomes are achieved for their
patients. (Bulechek and McCloskey, 1995) describe the coding in Nursing Intervention Classification
(NIC) as an aid to represent the very essence of nursing and (Herdman and Kamitsuru, 2014)
explains Nursing Outcome Classification (NOC) as standardised outcomes, developed to measure the
effects of nursing. (Jones et al., 2010) concur with an emphasis on the notion that SNLs as a
strategic means to demarcate nursing practice.
(Scannapieco, Missier and Batini, 2005) defines dimensions of data quality including accuracy,
completeness, time related dimensions and consistency, and each dimension will be captured on
the audit tool. See Appendix 1.0
6.2.3 Research Question
The nursing assessment: Are there differences between semi-electronic and paper based
documentation?
78
6.2.4 Aims and Objectives of study.
The aim is to compare semi-electronic and paper based styles of documentation of the nursing
assessment. Data will be audited for accuracy, completeness, timeliness and validity. Following
statistical analysis comparisons or similarities will be deduced.
The objective is to observe and compare if either style of documentation is of greater benefit to
patient care or the nursing process.
6.2.5 RESEARCH DESIGN
The study is a prospective non-experimental, point prevalence chart review and cross-sectional
analysis of pre-anonymised and aggregated data of the nursing assessment documentation. Chart
reviews will be from a total of four wards, two of which use a semi-electronic format for
documentation and two using a paper based format and who have not yet introduced semi-
electronic care plans.
Content from the audit tool to be used is based on the web based tool entitled ‘Test Your Care’
(TYC) which was developed in the UK and adapted by Nursing & Midwifery Planning Development
(NMPD) Quality Care-Metrics as a measure to monitor patient safety and promote quality evidence
based care, (HSE, 2015). The audit tool is an open access ‘nursing metric audit tool’. Permission and
guidance to use the tool and a guide for clinical audit is given by the HSE Quality and Improvement
division, HSE Quality Improvement division, (2015), eHealth Ireland (2014). In addition local
permission has been requested and granted from the SVUH policy document owner and no SVUH
specific metrics will be used other than data contained in the open access document.
6.2.6 Sample and sampling technique.
Random sampling of medical record charts from a total of four wards, focussing only on nursing
assessment documentation.
Charts will be only audited from Medical Wards and all wards follow a specific nursing process which
guides nurses towards an individual care plan, two ward locations use semi-electronic SNL and two
wards use paper based documentation. Documentation on the nursing assessment, using the open
access audit tool as per HSE guidelines on clinical audit, appendix 1.0 (Sections from the audit tool
79
that relate to documentation of nursing assessment and patient risk are highlighted in yellow).
Sections that will not be used have been removed or ‘strikethrough’ entered.
The number of charts chosen for audit will be 25% of the total number of patient on the ward at
time of audit and the patients must have been admitted for at least twenty four hours prior to
conducting the audit because the nursing assessment section must be completed within twenty four
hours of admission as per the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) guidelines. G *Power
analysis may be used to calculate effect size if indicated and confirm the 25% of total charts on the
ward as an acceptable sample size.
6.2.7 Inclusion/Exclusion criteria.
Inclusion Criteria
Documentation from patients charts who have been admitted for a minimum of twenty four hours.
Exclusion Criteria
Documentation from patients charts who have been admitted for a period of less than twenty four
hours.
6.2.8 Data Collection method(s) and timing of data collection
Data will be collected from patient record charts between April and May 2018. The data will consist
of the risk/assessment documentation in the nursing care plan and is highlighted in yellow Appendix
1.0. Data will be analysed using statistical methods and content analysis.
A summary of risk management occurrences for the four areas will be obtained, with permission
from the Director, from the Quality & Risk department.
No patient will be identified; all data will be collected and stored anonymously with no traceability
as per national and organisational data protection laws.
6.2.9 Ethical considerations, including proposed measures to assure confidentiality
and maintain staff anonymity.
(DPC Ireland 2017) and eHealth Ireland 2016 describe the principals around safe collection and
storage of data within an organisation, collection of data for this study is in line with current data
protection Acts of 1988, 2003 and also the new elements that will be introduced under the General
Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) due to be enforced in May 2018.
80
All data collected will be coded and divided into two categories, wards where charts used paper
based documentation and wards where SNL was used for documentation. Every patient’s identity
will remain anonymous because no patient details will be collected at any time. No patient Medical
Record Number (MRN), name nor Date of Birth (DOB) will be recorded at any point during data
collection. Anonymised data extracted from charts will remain on an excel sheet, SPSS and/or Le
Sphinx programme, coded and saved on researchers work computer. A summary of patient adverse
events may be used for analysis/reference purposes with permission from the director of Quality
and Risk Department.
6.2.10 Timescale
Data collection –> Mid April – Mid May 2018
Analysis of data –> April 2018
Writing paper –> May – June 2018
6.2.11 Facilities required from SVUH to support the study, including details of staff
involvement, location/department.
Ms Geraldine Regan -> Director of Nursing → Permission to access wards to conduct chart reviews.
Ward Clinical Nurse Managers (CNM), →Permission to access ward and patient notes at a
convenient time will be sought from the CNM on duty. I will introduce myself and arrange a suitable
time to conduct chart review.
Dr Ian Callanan -> Audit Department, guidance on conducting and analysing data.
Dr Alan Smith -> Quality and Risk Department -> Permission for and provide a summary of risk
management occurrences.
6.2.12 Plans for the dissemination of results, including internal dissemination.
Present final draft to Trinity College Dublin as final module towards MSc in Health Informatics.
After examination boards and Trinity College process is complete the author hopes to present
findings at nursing executive and nursing research innovation group meetings. In addition the
author hopes to collaborate with Dr Ian Callinan and senior nurse managers with an intention to
publish further work on this topic in nursing, informatics and science journals.
81
6.2.13 Bibliography
Bulechek, G. M. and McCloskey, J. C. (1995) ‘Nursing interventions classification (NIC).’, Medinfo. MEDINFO, 8 Pt 2, p. 1368. doi: 10.1097/00129191-200301000-00011.
Herdman, T. H. (Ed) and Kamitsuru, S. (Ed) (2014) ‘NANDA International nursing diagnoses: definitions and classification 2015-2017’, Nursing diagnoses 2015-2017 : definitions and classification, pp. 31–561. doi: 10.1007/s13398-014-0173-7.2.
HSE (2015) Guiding Framework for the Implementation of Nursing & Midwifery Quality-Care Metrics in the Health Service Executive. Ireland.
HSE Quality Improvement division (no date) Routine Audit Tools Acute Hospital Services - Ireland’s Health Service. Available at: https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-programmes/auditsupport/raudittoolsacute.html (Accessed: 15 April 2018).
Jones, D. et al. (2010) ‘Standardized nursing languages: essential for the nursing workforce.’, Annual Review of Nursing Research, 28, pp. 253–294. doi: 10.1891/0739-6686.28.253.
Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland (NMBI) (2015) NMBI Code of Professional Conduct and Ethics - Standards and Guidance, NMBI Publication. Available at: https://www.nmbi.ie/Standards-Guidance/Code (Accessed: 10 December 2017).
Saranto, K. et al. (2014) ‘Impacts of structuring nursing records: a systematic review’, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences, pp. 629–647. doi: 10.1111/scs.12094.
Scannapieco, M., Missier, P. and Batini, C. (2005) ‘Data Quality at a Glance’, Datenbank-Spektrum, 14(January), pp. 6–14. doi: 10.1.1.106.8628.
Scherb, C. a and Weydt, A. P. (2009) ‘Work complexity assessment, nursing interventions classification, and nursing outcomes classification: making connections.’, Creative nursing, 15(1), pp. 16–22. doi: 10.1891/1078-4535.15.1.16.
Roper, N., Logan W W., & Tierney A.J. (2000). The Roper-Logan-Tierney Model of Nursing: Based on
Activities of Living. Edinburgh: Elsevier Health Sciences. ISBN 0-443-06373-7.
www.ehealthireland.ie/Case-Studies-/Nursing-Midwifery-Quality-Care-Metrics [Accessed 5th Jan
2018]
www.ehealthireland.ie/Strategic-Programmes/Electronic-Health-Record-EHR- [Accessed 5th Jan
2018]
82
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other.../auditsupport/routineaudittools2.html
[Accessed Jan 2018]
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-
programmes/auditsupport/nursing-care-plans.xlsx [Accessed 14th April 2018]
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-
programmes/auditsupport/falls-metrics.xlsx [Accessed 14th April 2018]
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-
programmes/auditsupport/nursing-documentation-metrics.xlsx [Accessed 14th April 2018]
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-
programmes/auditsupport/pressure-ulcer-metrics.xlsx [Accessed 14th April 2018]
https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/qid/other-quality-improvement-
programmes/auditsupport//medication-management-metrics.xlsx [Accesses 14th April 2018]
Appendix
Appendix 1.0
Only data in the highlighted sections of this audit tool will be used to assess nursing assessment/risk
assessment; i.e. the data set and not the full template.
SVUH Audit: Acute Services Metrics (Nursing Quality Care Metrics) for 2018 -> Version removed
1. Medication Management
Medicinal Product Storage & Custody Quality Care-Metric 1 2 3 4
MEDICATION STORAGE AND CUSTODY AND MDA DRUGS IS
UNDERTAKEN JUST ONCE IN A MONTH FOR EACH WARD
1. A Registered nurse/midwife is in possession of the keys for
Medicinal Product Storage
2. All medicinal products are stored in a locked cupboard or locked
room
3. All medication trolleys are locked and secured as per local
organisational policy and open shelves on the medication trolley
83
are free of medicinal products when not in use
N.B. (Do not audit until further notice) 4. A drug formulary is
available on all Med Trolleys
N/A N/A N/A N/A
MDA Drugs Quality Care-Metric
1. MDA drugs are checked & signed at each changeover of shifts by
nursing staff. (By member of Day Staff & Night Staff) (72 Hrs)
2. Two signatures are entered in the MDA Drug Register for each
administration of an MDA drug (72 Hrs)
3. The MDA Drug cupboard is locked and keys for MDA cupboard
are held by designated nurse/midwife
4. MDA drug keys are kept separate from other medication keys
4. Medication Prescription
Medication Administration Quality Care-Metric 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10
Name of Ward Area:
(Please write name in top box for each chart
audited)
1. The Individuals’ prescription documentation
provides details of individuals’ legible name and
health care record number on each page/screen
2. The Individuals’ identification band has correct
and legible name and healthcare record number or
photo ID is in use
3. The allergy status of the individual is clearly
identifiable on the front page of the prescription
chart
4. Prescribed medication not administered has an
omission code entered (72 Hrs)
5. The individuals’ locker and bedside/ or
surrounding environment are free of unsecured
prescribed medicinal products
84
2. Nursing Care Plan Quality Care-Metric
Nursing Care Plan: Personal Details 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. The Individuals’ name and healthcare record
number are on each page/screen (72 Hrs)
2. Presenting complaints/reason for
admission/attendance and the admission date
and time are recorded
3. Past medical/surgical history are recorded
4. The allergy status is clearly identifiable on
relevant nursing documentation
5. Infection status/alert is recorded
Nursing Care Plan 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. A Nursing care plan is evident and reflects the
individuals’ current condition
2. All risk assessments have been completed
within a set timeframe as per local organisational
policy
3. Nursing Interventions are individualised,
dated, timed and signed.
4. Evaluation of the Nursing Care plan is evident
and has been updated accordingly
NMBI Guidance 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. All entries are dated and timed (24 hour clock)
(72 Hrs)
2. All written records are legible, in permanent
ink and signed
3. All entries are in chronological order (72 Hrs)
4. All abbreviations/grading systems are from a
national or local approved list/system
5. Alterations/corrections are as per NMBI
Guidance
85
3. Pressure Ulcer Quality Care-Metric
Pressure Ulcer Assessment 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. A Pressure Ulcer risk assessment was
conducted on admission/transfer to the
unit/ward and was dated, timed and signed by
the assessing staff member
2. There is evidence of a re-assessment of
pressure ulcer risk in accordance with
organisational policy
3. If the individual is identified at risk, a Care
Plan with pressure ulcer prevention measures
is evident
4. If identified as at risk, a daily skin inspection
has been recorded on the care plan/ skin
inspection chart (72 Hrs)
5. If a pressure ulcer is present, the grade is
recorded on the relevant documentation
4. Falls Quality Care-Metric
Falls Assessment 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. A Falls Risk Assessment was conducted on
admission/transfer to the unit/ward, which was
dated and signed by the assessing staff member
2. If the individual is identified as at risk, a Care
Plan with identified interventions to minimise
the risk of falls is evident
3. If the individual has fallen, post falls
documentation has been completed
6. Student entries are countersigned by the
supervising nurse or midwife (72 Hrs)
86
5. NEWS (National Early Warning Score)/Observations Quality Care-Metric
NEWS/Observations 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. The individuals’ name
and healthcare record
number are recorded
2. Vital Signs are
assessed at least 12
hourly in the last 72
hours (72 Hrs)
3. The NEWS is dated
and timed using the 24
hour clock for each entry
(72 Hrs)
4. In each entry,
Respiratory Rate,
SpO2%, Fi02%, Blood
Pressure, Heart Rate,
Temperature and AVPU
are recorded (72 Hrs)
5. 24hr cumulative
balances are evident on
all fluid balance charts
for the last 72hrs (Do
not audit)
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
N/
A
6. In each entry, the
NEWS is completed and
totalled correctly for the
last 72 hours
7. There is evidence that
the care was escalated
to the appropriate level
as per escalation
protocol (Team/On Call
SHO/Registrar/Consultan
t as appropriate) (72
Hrs)
8. There is evidence of
an increase in the
frequency of monitoring
and recording of vital
87
signs in response to the
detection of abnormal
physiology (72 Hrs)
6. Invasive Medical Devices Quality Care-Metric
7. Discharge Planning Quality Care-Metric
Invasive Medical
Devices
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. An assessment of the
insertion site (of the
PVC) is recorded daily
on the care plan (72
Hrs)
2. The clinical indication
for insertion of the
indwelling urinary
catheter is recorded (Do
not audit)
N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Discharge Planning 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. There is documented
evidence of Discharge
Planning
2. A Predicted Date of
Discharge is
documented (Do not
audit until further
notice)
N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
3. There is evidence of
Individual and Family
involvement in
communication in the
Discharge Plan
88
Glossary of Terms
ABA An Bord Altranais
NANDA-I Formerly known as North American Nursing
Diagnosis, 2018 referred to as NANDA-I
HSE Health Service Executive
NIC Nursing Interventions Classification
NOC Nursing Outcomes Classification
NMBI Nursing and Midwifery Bord of Ireland
SNL Standardised Nursing Language
EHR Electronic Health Record
Appendix 3: Ethics Approval letters
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
Appendix 4: Copy of falls risk screens and prevention care plan
96
Appendix 5: Copy of Pressure Ulcer/skin integrity assessment
Appendix 6: Copy of Nursing record discharge plan
97
98
99
Jamaica', Journal of Nursing Scholarship, vol. 48, no. 5, pp. 499–507, viewed 8 April 2018, <http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/jnu.12234>.
Linnen, D. 2016, 'The promise of big data', Nursing, vol. 46, no. 5, pp. 28–34.
Lundberg, C.B., Warren, J.J., Brokel, J., Bulechek, G.M., Butcher, H.K., Dochterman, J.M., Johnson, M., Martin, K.S., Spisla, C., Swanson, E. & Giarrizzo-wilson, S. 2008, 'Selecting a Standardized Terminology for the Electronic Health Record that Reveals the Impact of Nursing on Patient Care', Online Journal of Nursing Informatics, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 1–20.
Maben, J. & Griffiths, P. 2012, High Quality Care Metrics for Nursing, National Nursing Research Unit, King’s College London, London, viewed 19 June 2018, <http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/346019/1/High-Quality-Care-Metrics-for-Nursing----Nov-2012.pdf>.
Mahler, C., Ammenwerth, E., Wagner, A., Tautz, A., Happek, T., Hoppe, B. & Eichstädter, R. 2007, 'Effects of a computer-based nursing documentation system on the quality of nursing documentation', Journal of Medical Systems, vol. 31, no. 4, pp. 274–82.
De Marinis, M.G., Piredda, M., Pascarella, M.C., Vincenzi, B., Spiga, F., Tartaglini, D., Alvaro, R. & Matarese, M. 2010, '‘If it is not recorded, it has not been done!’? Consistency between nursing records and observed nursing care in an Italian hospital', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 19, no. 11–12, pp. 1544–1552.
Matney, S.A., Warren, J.J., Evans, J.L., Kim, T.Y., Coenen, A. & Auld, V.A. 2012, 'Development of the nursing problem list subset of SNOMED CT®', Journal of Biomedical Informatics, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 683–8, viewed 17 November 2017, <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1532046411002176>.
McCrae, N. 2011, 'Whither Nursing Models? The value of nursing theory in the context of evidence-based practice and multidisciplinary health care', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 222–9, viewed 7 May 2018, <https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/8a53/4da7e9a595747f0dfe6108eb3a87441aac7e.pdf>.
McGuire C, R.D. 2014, 'Developing leadership roles in nursing and midwifery.', Nursing Standard, vol. 29, no. 9, pp. 43–49.
Meehan, T.C. 2003, 'Careful nursing: A model for contemporary nursing practice', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 99–107.
Meehan, T.C. 2012, 'The Careful Nursing philosophy and professional practice model', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol.10. no 8, pp.990-1001.
Menachemi, N. & Collum, T.H. 2011, 'Benefits and drawbacks of electronic health record systems.', Risk management and healthcare policy, vol. 4, pp. 47–55, viewed 28 April 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22312227>.
Middleton, B., Bloomrosen, M., Dente, M.A., Hashmat, B., Koppel, R., Overhage, J.M., Payne, T.H., Rosenbloom, S.T., Weaver, C. & Zhang, J. 2013, 'Enhancing patient safety and quality of care by improving the usability of electronic health record systems: Recommendations from AMIA', Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, vol. 20, no. E1, pp. 2–8, viewed 12 May 2018, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23355463>.
Monsen, K.A., Fitzsimmons, L.L., Lescenski, B.A., Lytton, A.B., Schwichtenberg, L.D. & Martin, K.S. 2006, 'A public health nursing informatics data-and-practice quality project', Comput Inform Nurs, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 152–8.
Moorhead, Sue; Johnson, Marion; Maas, Meridean L; Swanson, E. 2013, Nursing Outcomes Classification (N0C), Fifth., Elsevier, St Louis, MO.
100
Muller-Staub, M, de Graaf-Waar, H, Paans, W. 2016, 'An Internationally Consented Standard for Nursing
Process-Clinical Decision Support Systems in Electronic Health Records', CIN: Computers,